From Berger: at 300K RPM or greater, the risk of jacket failure becomes an issue. In a .223 with 90s at 2850 fps, you hit 300K once you go faster than a 7-twist (somewhere between 6.9- and 6.8-twist). Coincidence? Sure, it could be. But it seems more than coincidence that Berger would mention 300K RPM as a potential failure point and the fact that the majority of the F-TR shooters experiencing 90 VLD jacket issues I've spoken to were using 6.8-twist (or faster) barrels. That's not incontrovertible proof; there could actually be many contributing factors and once you are working with than a certain number, the odds go way up. Nonetheless, the jacket failure rate with 90 VLDs seems to correlate with faster than 7-twist barrels.
In fact, the issue could be more than simply the RPM; the land angle and shape of the rifling itself could also play a role. For example, exceeding 300K RPM with a slower than 7-twist barrel (i.e. 7.2-twist) via greater muzzle velocity may not be quite as hard on the jacket as when the bullet exceeds 300K RPM at slower muzzle velocity with a faster twist rate. Who knows? But it's pretty clear that in .223 Rem F-TR setups, it's more likely to happen in a barrel with faster than 7.0-twist.