I was planning on an f open project with a .22 creedmore with a 30-32 inch barrel with a muzzle velocity target of around 3400fps but before ordering a barrel I was just trying to see if the effort was going to be inside the capabilities of the bullet jacket or the concept was outside what these class of bullets can withstand during fast string fire, I figured a 1-8 twist would keep the RPM to around 306k. So in your experience a .219 diameter barrel with 5r riffling is the ticket to make sure these reach the target? How about a 7 twist is 360K outside the realistic capabilities of this particular projectile?
As Jdne5b noted, you're talking about velocity/RPM far beyond anything I would normally ever see from a .223 Rem. So I cannot state with any certainty what will happen at 360K RPM when using a 0.219" bore barrel. It may be that some of the other major variables (barrel length, twist rate, etc.) that can potentiate jacket failure issues would still be mitigated with a 0.219" bore as they are with slower .223 Rem loads. However, you're in uncharted territory with respect to my experience, so it could also be that some of these factors again become limiting with respect to jacket integrity at RPM values that high, even with the 0.219" bore.
In your situation, I would use something like Berger's Twist rate calculator with the best estimates you have for velocity, etc., to determine the absolute
slowest possible twist rate you could go with and still achieve a gyroscopic stability coefficient (Sg) of about 1.4 (or higher) so that you wouldn't be giving up too much BC by under-spinning the bullets. That would then set the maximum twist rate for a new barrel. At that point, the only thing you can do is test and see what happens. In the event 3400 fps velocity was causing jacket failure, you would still have a few other options such as tuning the load 85.5s in at a slower velocity, using either the SMK 90 or 95 gr bullets, which seem to have tougher jackets, or switching to a lighter bullet with a lower BC and a shorter bearing surface. The downside to these alternatives is that a chamber freebore dimension optimized for the 85.5s will not be ideal with much shorter or longer bullets. With the 6.8-twist 0.218"/0.224" barrels I had that were blowing up 90 VLDs and 88 ELDMs, I resorted to running two or three patches of Kroil through the barrel after each 20-shot relay, followed by three dry patches. This removed much of the carbon fouling, which seemed to be a contributing factor, but not the copper. My first sighter in the next match would be slightly low (slow), but not enough to put me out of the 10-ring. I can tell you that doing this at a match was a PITA, but I wanted to shoot the rifle and not have it become a safe queen. Once I adopted this procedure, I never lost another bullet during a match from those barrels, but I 'd rather not have to do that procedure again just to keep from losing jackets. There was also a general lack of trust in those barrels from that point on, which is really not where you want to be.
Unfortunately, this is the risk we take when starting a project such as this with a lot of unknowns. The good news as DR_2297 and 762willdo posted above is that even if you have to slow the load down a bit, you'll still end up with a rifle that can push the 85.5s well in excess of 3000 fps, even if not quite the 3400 fps you had hoped for. At one time, I had the notion of building an Open rifle to shoot 90 VLDs from a 22 BR case, but I never went any further with it due to the exact same limitations you seem to be coming up against. If you decide to go ahead with the project, best of luck with it.