Our forebears seemed to make out okay along the east coast with their 4' long rifles and muskets.
I've hunted elk with 26" barrelled magnums in the dark timber out west and hunted WT's with 18" rifles in the east. To tell the truth, I've never noticed any difference between the two. I often take the strap off the rifle and put it in my pack to make sure the rifle is in my hands and not acrost my back when I need it so I just unconiously guide the muzzle around and through stuff as I go along.
Krochus, that still doesn't sound right. I agree that the powder is burnt shortly after ignition. I agree that the pressure begins dropping immediately after or shortly after the bullet begins to move BUT pressure is a measure of the increase of the volume of "air" that is in the cartridge. The exspansion of the gases. And that brings another question: (

) Why does it take say 15 grains of 3031 in a 30-06 case to produce 50,000 psi but it takes 30 grains of 4350? ALL IMR powder is the same stuff. What controls the burn rate is the size of the extrusions and the surface deterents.
Maybe I'd better go back to my "monkey see, monkey do" style of reloading.