Seems to be quite a bit of guessing going on here?
Picking a bullet, and seating it to mag length, then having chamber and throat cut to same, is hardly a recent discovery. However, I will agree with my good friend Chuck, that the 7mmRM has long suffered from a short throat, and diminished case capacity, due to having to seat bullets further in the case.
There is no hard, fast rule when speaking about pressures. Seat a bullet deeper in a case, without adjusting powder charge, and most likely pressure will increase. Seat a bullet touching, or just off of the lands, with no other adjustments, pressure will most likely increase. Cut a throat longer, to seat a bullet longer, to put more powder in the case? Pressure will most likely increase. There is no free lunch. Velocity comes with a pressure price, every time.
Roy W. pioneered the huge, cavernous throat, to reduce pressures in rather large cases. Nothing new there either, but usually accuracy suffers with such massive jumps to the lands.
Not really sure what Chuck was trying to accomplish here, other than to show off another k-mart mauser build, type a rather entertaining story, and let us all know that he, and he alone, has guessed that he has discovered how Roy W. got all that speed from those cases.
R.