The amount of clearance or crush depends on the use of the rifle.
... So, short bench guys want cases to have no crush - maybe 0.001" or 0.002" of empty space.
Long range shooters, who do not shoot fast inside of a wind "window" can benefit from more crush, cuz it leads to very long case life - I have thrown away cases with almost 50 firings (and they were still fine, but I wanted to upgrade to Lapua), and other guys have 80 to 100 firings on their cases - for that, you need 2 to 4 or more thou of crush.
I prefer to feel a fair amount of resistance on the bolt handle when I close the bolt. There are no stress "problems" induced. The rifle closes tight, and it is fine. After all, once you pull the trigger, THEN the stress happens - in spades !!
When you cam the bolt closed so it’s crushing a case that‘s .004” or more longer from case head to shoulder datum than the chamber is long from bolt face to chamber shoulder datum, how is that using the bolt to force fit the longer case to the shorter chamber not working the brass pretty much the same as you would be if you shoving the shoulder back .004” or more in a size die?
Then once you’ve used the bolt to crush fit the case down to the same length as the chamber, and you fire that thang, how else but by bolt lug yield and by the action stretching is it possible to make the bolt face to chamber shoulder datum length long enough so that after getting the bolt back open, the case exits expanded out again to .004” or more longer than the action’s at rest bolt face to chamber shoulder datum length?