Wow...PMax of 76.632 psi!
Must admit, I'd have chosen a slower burning /lower energy powder than N135 for the 75gr Amax...perhaps N140 if using Viht powders (I use RS50 for 77gr Sierra bullets).
However, the question above is what OAL to use. With that bullet, and the suggested max load it could be a heavily compressed load at 2.26OAL and as dodgy says, especially if close and personal with the lands, you could run into very high/dangerous pressure spikes. Stop and take a breath...
Using similar bullets, I started at 15 thou off lands albeit in a custom chambered rifle, with an oal of 2.352" (loads of 23gr to 24gr), and worked back to 2.29" for loads of 23gr or less in RS50. You'd be compressing loads a lot given your initial findings if working up to 24gr or anywhere close at 2.26OAL.
Personally, looking at the data, 24gr N135 for that bullet seated to 2.26 looks like it might be a heavily compressed load. If the OP suggests that rifling marks are evident on the dummy round, something's not right here and alarm bells should be ringing.
First question...how many times was the OAL checked for the dummy round? If using that (or any) method, I carefully re-check the oal at least 10 times and take the average. This method also shows if one or two checks which, for whatever reason, are a mile out. Check and double check, then check again 8 more times!
Once you've found your OAL, I wouldn't advise starting 10 thou off..it's too close to account for variations in meplat to ogive variations and you'll run into trouble, sooner or later. Really, you ought to check oal using a comparator gauge which measures to Ogive, not meplat. Start at 15 thou off, especially if using stiffish loads, no closer.
As you work your ladder up, one trick to ensure consistent uniform ignition and initial burn is to look at usable case capacity and seat the bullet to allow for 97% to say just over 100% case capacity. Slight compressed loads are no problem and on their own will not raise pressures. Pressures are more affected by being too close to the lands, especially where there can be significant variations in meplat to ogive distances and you've selected close seating based on meplat to case head measurement.
Slightly compressed loads won't crush the powder much....heavily compressed loads may. The trigger is that there is potential with the greater surface area and smaller particles for burn rate to be affected (speeded up) which can raise pressures. A light compressed load shouldn't result in this and will uniform burn rate for better shot to shot consistency, as with nearly case full loads.
If you start at 15 thou off and have a slightly compressed load for your maximum load that (say 101 to 103% useful case capacity fill ratio) then you should be on safe ground when working your charges up from the start load. That's what I'd advise anyway.
Something just doesn't look right though with your measured chamber length. The T3 in factory chambering in 1/8 twist (I'm assuming that's what it is?) ought to allow for bullets that take advantage of that twist rate unless you magazine length doesn't allow for recommended OAL in that bullet. If the rifle is set up for longer bullets from the factory, then my first common sense check would be to re-test OAL checking very carefully that everything is set up correctly and repeating for an average as above. That has to be the starting point before starting on any load development.