I would believe the manufacturer.
After all, they're the one with sophisticated ballistic equipment to measure pressures.
They fire hundreds of thousands of rounds per year, many of them created to determine worst case scenarios.
They have trained ballisticians, chemists, physicists, engineers and other specialists to study the (sometimes subtle) effects of assembling their components into a cartridge.
I first loaded WW296 in the .357 Magnum about 1976, using the Speer 146 gr. half jacket bullet in a Ruger Security 6. I don't recall the powder charge, but it was one
fierce load! If you missed the target, you gave it a heart attack from the blast or incinerated it with the muzzle flash!
![Grin ;D](https://www.gboreloaded.com/forums/Smileys/default/grin.gif)
Since day one, even going back to the days of 296's predecessor 295HP, Winchester warned that a strong crimp was necessary for proper ignition and to avoid squibs.
I've found a heavy crimp necessary with 2400 in my .44 Magnum, for proper ignition, so Winchester's warning is not without precedent.
As far as proper ignition goes, the cartridge doesn't know whether it's been fired in a rifle or revolver. Proper ignition and burning of the powder can be greatly influenced by crimp.
Believe what Winchester tells you -- they have the experience and means to determine the whys and wherefores.