Lapua 7-08 cases have been around for a number of years, likely 10 or more. As with all Lapua brass it's well made, consistent and pretty strong. It is large primer / 2mm flash-hole of course and has similar capacity to the company's 308 Win - marginally less thanks to the smaller diameter neck only. That about sums it up - just as the 7-08 design is a 308 Win with a 20 thou' smaller O/D and slightly longer neck, so the Lapua 7-08 case is identical to its 308 Win stablemate apart from those changes. It has less internal capacity than Remington or Winchester 7-08 brass but will (maybe) take full pressure loads better. I know from direct experience though that whilst very good quality, it is not at all difficult to overload this brass in trying to reach target MVs in 7-08, and even more so 260 Rem. I have produced a few blown primers having relied too much on QuickLOAD in the 260 and also junked many more cases after only a loading or two where the primer pockets turned out to be slack when it came to load them again. The AI improvements will likely pay off here in giving that extra bit of capacity to reach those MVs without excessive pressure killing the brass.
Reformed Lapua (or Peterson, Alpha etc) small-primer brass will take full pressures better still though. As I said in my earlier post, I'm not 'pushing' pressures into the mid 60,000s of psi, but if you take most makes of standard (large primer) case and run them at any higher pressures than factory ammunition loadings of c.57-58,000 psi MAP, then brass life will be short thanks to slack primer pockets, or more precisely case-head expansion.
The question mark then moves to ignition reliability. There are several people on this forum who maintain that when you get to 308 Win case and charge sizes, the small primer's reduced energy allied to the 1.5mm flash-hole are simply inadequately powered to obtain reliable ignition. It is said that Bryan Litz is dubious about 'Palma' brass and uses large primer Lapua in his F/TR loads. That's hearsay and I don't know if it's true, but I do know Bryan is strongly of the view that largeish ES/SD values often result from marginal ignition efficiency (ie fractional hesitations or 'hangfires' in starting charge burn), so marginal that the shooter sees and hears nothing amiss but the chronograph shows it through MV variations. 308 Win case size obviously includes necked down or up versions including 7-08, 260 Rem, and 243 Win which also use slower burning and therefore potentially harder to ignite powder grades than the parent design. All I can say is that running with 47gn + of N160 (and a bit more of N165 in some tests), ie as much as the Lapua case will physically hold, I've seen no such issues even in temperatures not much above freezing and the MagnetoSpeed, now Labradar, show acceptable ES values, same as large primer brass equivalent loads - no better, but really importantly, no worse either.