No offense taken at all, just clarifying that I was referring in the previous post to a specific scenario with a 30" barrel. The 2" additional barrel length won't directly account for a 175 fps increase in velocity. In fact, I wouldn't expect it to be worth more than 20-30 fps at the very most. Increasing the freebore length will also make a small difference in the pressure required to achieve a given velocity, but again, not nearly enough to account for a 175 fps increase in velocity. So how are you actually achieving those velocities with the 85.5s without killing your brass?
As noted, using a slightly longer barrel and/or lengthening the freebore are two ways to achieve a given velocity at slightly lower pressure. I have previously played around with the 85.5s in QuickLoad quite a bit. Even inputting a 0.220" freebore, a 32" barrel, and running up the pressure to ~57.1K psi, which is comparable to the 90s @ 2850 fps over H4895 from a 30" barrel, the best predicted velocity for the 85.5s is around 2950 fps. Once the program has been calibrated, I have found the predictions I get from QuickLoad to be very good. So again, I'm curious how you're getting an additional 50 fps beyond that velocity (or more) with the 85.5s, together with 8 firings on your brass?
I can certainly think of a couple ways you might be able do it, including using some other powder besides H4895, or moly-coating bullets, but most people's loads with the 85.5s using Varget or H4895 in Lapua brass are not going to reach anywhere near 3000 fps without major primer pocket issues. If there's some secret or special approach involved, you don't need to let the cat out of the bag, as I'm just curious and have no intention of attempting to replicate your results. Nonetheless, you seem to be getting far greater velocity than most, so it seems like a question worth asking.