2 miles is a pretty fair poke.....
The Weighting Factor adjusts the relationship between velocity and peak pressure. If you leave it constant and model larger and larger case volumes, you'll find that it exaggerates the overbore effect. Pressures go up, but velocities don't. A couple years ago, I started testing the effect of overbore on performance and barrel life. I used the Lapua 338 Lapua case as the basis for a series of increasingly overbore cartridges. The overbore was adjusted by necking the case down to 7 or 30 caliber and improving it. A 7/338 Lapua Improved is very similar in overbore to a 338 Snipetac, but was a lot cheaper to build with parts on hand. I started with a straight 7/338 Lapua, which is similar in overbore to the 375 Lethal Mag. Yes, I've turned a few bullets inside out. I've also done a 30/338 Lapua Improved which is just past a 28 Nosler. My latest 338 Lapua RPR recently became a straight 300 Lapua. By using the same case for all of them and using the blade mic on the extractor groove to gauge pressure, it became apparent that something in the QL models needed to change to get the pressures and velocities to line up. What I came up with was 0.45 works pretty well for overbore ratios along the lines of 300wm and 338 Lapua. 0.40 is pretty close for a 300 Norma or 338 Lapua Improved, I'm using 0.35 for the 33xc. Another way to go about it is 0.45 for cases with enough capacity to use H1000, 0.40 for Retumbo, and 0.35 for H50bmg. It's not a characteristic of the powder, it's a characteristic of cases with enough capacity to use those powders well.
A guy I shoot with did something similar with the 375CT case. He went through four 338 Snipetac barrels with very similar results to the 7/338 Lapua Improved.
Track down the 33XC thread where Boatwright schools me on Shot Start Pressure. Basically, Shot Start Pressure is a catch all for several things. It's not just the engraving pressure. It's also where you model the effects of things like jump/jam, neck tension, bore size, leakage in the freebore before obturation,.....
https://www.snipershide.com/shootin...tridges-designed-by-david-tubb.6899366/page-5
He starts at post 221. At post 220, I'm at where you're at now.
You may find that load is less temperature sensitive at lower pressures. I test a lot of stuff back to back. Maybe load a box of 50 half with what you're doing and half 3 grains lower. Check your 100 yard zeros and add the offset and new velocity to your solver as a different bullet. Shoot 5 of one, then 5 of the other. On the next iteration, switch the shooting order. By the end of the box, you'll have a pretty good idea of what the differences are. The primary thing I grade on is vertical spread. I always shoot with Labradar to keep tabs on how the velocity spread is contributing to that.
I like that Bagrider setup. I have them on both my big RPRs. Adapting them to my XLR chasis is on the projects list.