OOPS!
I re-read my posting and you are right! I worded it wrong.
I meant to suggest that the RN bullet loading was longer because the truncated cone loading impacted on the feedramp too soon, reducing feeding reliability.
Why the scarcity of info on the 7.65 P and 9mm P?? Why did US manufacturer's standardize on the shorter OAL?
Maybe because at the time (1925) the SAAMI organized these cartridge/chamber dimensions, there were no US-made guns chambered for either 7.65 P or 9mm P. So, the OAL of the shorter bullet was copied. They were all European (German) manufacture. Sure, the "American Eagle Parabellums" were available, but they were imported.
Similar mistakes were made, including the 7mm Mauser which through oversight or translation of engineering documents, chambers ended up with SAAMI dimensions several thousandth's of an inch longer than the German standard and cartridges shorter than standard. Firing US 7mm Mauser ammo in early Remington rolling block rifles for example, gives unsatisfactory case life due to this incompatibility. Even recent NATO arms production shows these differences: European 7.62x51 chambers and bore dimensions have subtle differences from US standards.
If I remember correctly, as late as WWII, only S&W made a 9mm P gun, and that for an ill-fated machine carbine rejected by the British. S&W didn't build 9mm P pistols until the M39 in the early 1950's. NATO standardization didn't start until the 1950s, and the 9x19 NATO was much later.
I'd be interested in the results of you P studies, if you care to share them.
John