The "rule of thumb" is at 1800 fps and faster, especially with faster and mid range powders, you want gas checks and > 20 BNH alloy. That said, there are many people successfully shooting softer alloy without gas checks (or claiming they do), but probably with slow burners. With a straight wall case, the slow burning powders don't seem to perform as well and you get ineficient or incomplete burns - though maybe 26" is long enough to avoid this.
Cast bullets want a lot of fossicking around to find that which works best for you; part of their charm.
What I can say is that gas checked at 1800, all other things being equal, you should be getting the bullet centered in the barrel and moving well. If you don't want to gas check, alloy hardness is not the only other part of the equation. You're in an area that is more art than science. Different lubes, seating depth, powder burn rates, bullet weight, design and diameter... they all play a role and, if you are so inclined, you can experiment quite a bit and may find a combination that gives you good un-checked performance. Me, I gas check anything over 1500 fps (which is very conservative and quite possibly unnecessary to the point of stupid) but that takes one variable out of the equation.