*MALICE*
I'm not doubting your word, but it was my understanding that semiautos like the M14/M1A and the M16/AR15 with a mid length gas system can have pressure in the barrel while the bolt moves to the rear. This is the reason that a fired case can end up longer than the chamber and the reason why uncrimped primers can pop out of the primer pocket.
Meaning this remaining pressure can move the case shoulder forward as the bolt moves to the rear and give a false cartridge headspace reading when using case length gauges like the Hornady gauge. This happens more with M14/M1A rifles and bumping the case shoulder .002 to .003 from its fired length may not be enough.
Bottom line, it was my understanding a over gassed rifle can still have pressure in the barrel when the bolt starts moving to the rear. And also why primers can pop out and jam the trigger group if the case has a loose primer pocket.
You are absolutely correct in your above assertions.
However, just because the bullet has exited the barrel, doesn't mean the pressure is instantaneously zero. It starts dropping significantly/rapidly but that takes time (an entire firing sequence for a gun happens in split seconds). It seems like instantaneously because people can not perceive time in the fractions of seconds that firing a round takes.
These numbers are just made up but they're only for explanation purposes;
Let's say that when the bullet reaches the end of the barrel there is 20000psi. The bullet is now .1" away from the barrel and that took .1seconds and the barrel pressure has now dropped rapidly to 10000psi. The bullet is now .2" away from the barrel and that took another .1 seconds and the pressure has now dropped to 5000psi.
So as we see, rapidly dropping pressure, but the bullet has left the barrel........and if the breach is now unlocked, the pressure has two escape points.
If the barrel completely unlocked before the bullet had left the barrel, you would have a full gas system full of pressure released into the action.
Think of a silencer/suppressor: Semi autos fitted with them have increased backpressure, thus cycle harder and have increased fouling because even though the bullet has left the gun, the gas pressure has not/can not completely dissipated from the system instantaneously.