I think it would be zero.
The case is ironed by pressure to the chamber walls.
It can't add any hoop strength before the chamber yields because of it's elasticity.
A brass case flows under pressure, you can't tell me it adds any strength to the system.
Yours is the first assertion of this alleged phenomoneon I can recall.
The first assertion is true, so what?
The second, steel is also elastic, so what?
The third, where to begin. Because brass flows under pressure it can't add any strength to the system, really? Do you really think that?
Let's put all that aside for a bit and look at what will happen in two identical pressure vessels in the following test. One is subjected to increasing but time limited pressure spikes until distortion. The other is subjected to the last pressure on the first before distortion and is held at that pressure. Over time the second vessel will distort too. How quickly this happens depends on the material involved. What revelance does this have to the matter at hand? Only to illustrate the difficulty in testing the effects of pressure in different contexts. Submarines are designed to withstand a pressure from the outside that would blow them apart if applied from the inside. But enough. I can see that nothing I might say would convince you. And rightly so too. If I don't back it up with proof-- well.
By the way, can you prove th Earth is an oblate spheroid?