Hey RG,
Yes, the propellant is actually almost all burned out in the first inch, depending upon any cylinder gap or throat. Now, the "push" continues after max pressure, so just because all the powder's burned out, it does not mean that the GAS is not still working on the base of the projectile.
There are a bunch of variables that determine how long it takes for the projectile to "outrun" the pressure generated. Chamber diameter, throat, lead, primer composition, and charge weight. All sorts of stuff.
I went down the path you describe. Many shooters did, especially in the "accuracy" game of Olympic prone and 3-position. We'd shoot a short barrel, then put a "bloop tube" on the end, to extend our sight radius. It was all the rage for a while. Here's what I can undeniably tell you: At one point, there was a "study" commissioned of barrel lengths and barrel makers. All rimfire, all shot from a 2013 action, all shot out of the stock. Various ammunitions of "match grade". IIRC, there were about 40 different barrels in this study. When it was all said and done, the three top barrels were of "German manufacture", all the same manufacture, all "Long", full-length, (maybe 24 or 26"?). I don't believe there was a single "short" barrel which made the top-10 cut. Why? Probably has something to do with the variation in the acceleration of gravity or something....
I will make an assumption that both the "short barrels" and "Long barrels" supplied by one German manufacturer used the same match reamer.
As to the rest of the barrels, both long and short, I cannot attest to the reamer dimensions, nor throats.
Food for thought,
1smalljohnson