Depending on neck tension, what makes you think you have any headspace after the firing pin pushes the case up?
I know years ago I read on BRC a guy did some testing with dead primers measuring how much the firing pin pushes the cases up on jammed bullets. It was more than you would think. I am not sure the results would be quite the same if the case actually fired.
I kinda think that is why jumped bullets can be so accurate. When the firing pin shoves the case up the shoulder centers the cartridge. But then what the hell do I know.
OK, I've got to ask, just where do you think headspace is and what is the reason for it?
I don't intend to take this off topic but I'm curious how someone could think that headspace disappears when the cartridge case is pushed forward.