Crimping, as I mentioned, has an important place in a double rifle where you may fire the right barrel ONLY a number of times yet there is always a round...the same round...in the left barrel. As sometimes the continued repeated recoil will be enough to eventually work the left barrel bullet loose from its case. In revolvers, again, if not crimped or "coned" as the British Textbook of Smallarms calls it the bullet can come loose on the sixth cartridge. On the Webley .455 the pull weight to be imposed by the crimp to stop these bullet coming loose from its case was specified as something like twenty-four pounds dead weight. This potential coming loose is usually always worst with heavy bullets and especially heavy bullets of large diameter I have found. Again it can supposedly happen in a conventional magazine rifle if you were, say culling, but "topped up" the magazine each time a shot was fired.