Thank you Sherm - that's what I thought - I'd have expected to pressure out before attaining that velocity via RL-15.
What follows is an attempt to help people decide on barrel twist rate for the longer/heavier bullets.
Here are pics of some 40 & 53 Gr. BT, .20 Cal. bullets. Note that the length of the 53 Gr. version is 0.837”, or, 4.103 calibers long. The me’plat diameter is 0.045”. As calculated on the Tioga Engineering Bullet Design program, this bullet, at 3500 FPS, for a gyroscopic stability factor (Sg) of 1.5,@sea-level, Std. conditions, requires a twist rate of 1:8.4”. A 1:9” twist barrel will result in Sg1.3 - weak, but not quite, “a wreck”. A longer & lighter bullet will need a somewhat faster twist. Sg of less than 1.4 will not get all of the potential BC the bullet has to offer. Tioga predicts a BC (G1) of .39 - in my experience, calculated BC seldom holds up - in the real-world: subtracting 0.010 - 0.015 is a realistic expectation; .375 - .38 will probably prove close.
For those who use the readily available, and accurate, JBM drag/twist calculator (not the Miller formula, which the last time I compared it, still had some bugs to work out) here are the vital inputs, in calibers: length = 4.103; nose length = 2.863; BT length = .417; BT end diameter = .823; specific gravity = 10.4; me’plat diameter = .220. Compare at a close velocity, and you’ll be within 0.10” of twist rate requirement.
You can input somewhat varying lengths, leaving specific gravity, BT length and angle (or, end diameter), and me-plat diameter and get a reasonably close idea of what you need. The Tioga Bullet Design (the late, William C. Davis Jr.) & the McCoy based Drag/Twist calculator invariably produce twist rate within 0.1". When they do not correlate, something is, "out of whack".

RG
Ooops - It's important to determine, and enter the correct, or close to it, specific gravity,
as this accommodates the program in calculating the balance & the overturning moment - what I found lacking in the Miller program - but that could have been corrected by now.
