The unloaded case that is pictured sure looks like an Ackley case.
The shadow on the factory case makes it difficult to see the damaged neck. Looks like a mis-alignment in a loading machine, and case was damaged when the bullet was seated.
I did save a copy of your picture to run by my brother when he visits sometime in the future. We talk on the phone, but I do not trade e-mails with him. My young nephew attracts virus, going to internet gaming sites looking for cheat codes. When he comes to visit the machine he uses it disconnected from the Net.
My brother offered to bring his 270 Ackley with him and let me shoot it on his next visit. It was a kind offer but I told him that he needed to take it out and fire his loads across his Chrony. That is the data I want. Does his load show a usable gain, loss, or duplicate factory 270 Winchester velocities.
At times he has a short attention span when it comes to his wildcat rifles. He has a number of starting points, in this case I believe he started with a factory chamber and had it re-cut for the Ackley case. He purchased 270 Ackley dies, and some 270 Ackley cases. He has also created some cases firing factory ammunition. His attention was then diverted to a 6.5-.284 Winchester project. He already owned standard .270 Winchester dies.
It would be interesting to do some load testing for the .270 Ackley. I would start with 150-grain bullet. Near maximum loads of H4831 come close to filling a .270 Winchester case along with 785, and WMR. In my rifles the combination provides top velocity and accuracy. Will there be a velocity gain with the .270 Ackley case using H4831, 780, RL-19 and RL-22.
http://www.beartoothbullets.com/tech_notes/archive_tech_notes.htm/43The 270 Ackley project had become a footnote in a procession of wildcat rifles, build them, load for them, shoot them, and forget them for the next project. He is like a sailor in a new port. He would kick my butt for that. Okay, a marine in a new port!