Other than losing case efficiency (and therefore burning more powder than necessary for a given velocity), is there any downside to loading a cartridge "cold" (as in, the opposite of "hot")? Think along the lines of 300WM loaded to duplicate the velocity of a .308 Win (given the same projectile).
I'm asking because I am in the planning stages of my next build, and I have a goal of 3000 FPS at the muzzle... and most of the cartridges I look at are either creeping up on that (as in, I might be able to get there), or well over that (as in, 3200 FPS). So I was wondering if it wouldn't make sense to go with the case that I know could get me to my velocity goal, then loading it down/cold/light in an effort to extend barrel life (vs that same cartridge at full velocity), etc...
I'm asking because I am in the planning stages of my next build, and I have a goal of 3000 FPS at the muzzle... and most of the cartridges I look at are either creeping up on that (as in, I might be able to get there), or well over that (as in, 3200 FPS). So I was wondering if it wouldn't make sense to go with the case that I know could get me to my velocity goal, then loading it down/cold/light in an effort to extend barrel life (vs that same cartridge at full velocity), etc...