As Clark pointed out, the reload manuals stop at around 50,000psi...... BR guys don't even START there. Powder barely BURNS down there.... it's more like a sooty campfire than a nice clean burn!
Limiting factors for BR cartridges include primer pocket expansion, "ejector marks" or the shiny rubbed spot caused by brass being hammered into the ejector hole and last but not least "pierced primers," properly termed blanked primers..... Blanking of primers is caused by the pressure inside the case rising to such level that it punches a hole right through the primer cup material like a punch press. The hole is left by the departing slug of metal that used to cover the firing pin hole.......This action slams the firing pin to the rear, overriding the trigger bar and possibly breaking your trigger. The small disc of primer cup brass ends up inside your bolt and must be removed so blanking primers is a pita.
You will have to get up into the area outside the books to realize BR velocities, and accuracy levels. I like 2900fps but most rifles will also shoot decently somewhere around 2760. For many rifles the 2650 figure falls right between accuracy nodes.
al