There is an IMPORTANT DIFFERENCE (!) between the shorter pistol cartridges and a .30-30 rifle cartridge. If you lay a .30-30 and .32 -.45 caliber pistol rounds on a table end to end, note the difference on where the nose of the bullet contacts the round in front of it.
Since it is longer, is a bottle necked cartridge and a smaller caliber, the nose of the .30-30 will rest more on the the rim of the forward cartridge.
Lay 2 .30-30 rounds on a table and see where the bullet nose rests against the base of the cartridge in front of it.
The .32-.45 caliber pistol rounds being shorter and bigger in diameter compared to their length, will line up more against the primer which is not a good situation with round nosed bullets.
As an example of this, back in the late 60's or early 70's Ruger came out with a tube fed semi automatic carbine chambered in .44 magnum. After at least one fellow blew out the magazine when using full patch round nosed bullets, Ruger issued a stern warning not to use round nosed fmj bullets in that rifle.
With regards to the .30-30, it has been factory loaded with round nosed and flat point bullets since 1895, some of them even being full metal patched! Because the bullet nose rests more against the rear of the case head and not on the primer, there have never been any problems. If there were, the ammunition manufacturers would have stopped loading them long ago.
If you load several .30-30 cartridges into a '94 Winchester where you can observe them coming into the carrier from the magazine, here's what you should see:
1st cartridge out - nose against the left side / 2nd cartridge out - nose against the right side / 3rd cartridge out - nose against the left side / last cartridge out - nose against the right side.
I did this twice with the same result. In thinking this through, here's what happens in loading:
The first cartridge in rests with it's nose against the left side of the magazine since it is angled that way. When the second cartridge goes in, pressure against the left side of the base of the first cartridge causes the first cartridge's nose to move position to the right side of the magazine.
When number three goes in, it's nose rests against the base of cartridge number two, but number two can't change position since it's nose is locked into the left side of the base of number one cartridge because of the "uphill" angle of number one's base.
When cartridge number four goes in, the pressure against the left side of the base of number three cartridge causes the nose of number three cartridge to slide over the base of number two cartridge which is "downhill" to the right, thus locking the nose of number three cartridge to the right and the nose of number four cartridge to the left.
By comparison, pistol cartridges come into the carrier with the bullet nose resting directly on the center of the round in front of it.
As one can see, there is a definite difference between rifle cartridges and pistol cartridges in a tubular magazine.
Stay safe.
w30wcf