I apologize in advance if this is a stupid question, but I'm trying to understand the physics. The last two precision gas guns I've had - a GAP-10 .308 and a JP .260 seem to show pressure signs in loads that are well below loads that I shoot in match chambered Bolt guns of the same caliber. I get flattened primers and swipe well before I would in the bolt gun equivalent when using the same bullet and powder combo. Is there something about the gas gun mechanism itself that causes this? If so, how? Even though gas is being routed to the BCG to unlock the bolt and cycle the action - the bullet should already be out of the barrel by the time the bolt begins to unlock, right? So I would think any chamber pressure impulse has already occured before the gas port has any effect on the issue. Is it simply differences in chamber dimensions causing the higher pressure? The need for bullets to be seated deeper for mag length in gassers? Some combo of all the the above? I'm just trying to wrap my head around this. TIA.