If the length of a case is such that it crushes into the throat of a rifle upon loading, then pressures are liable to be erratic & excessive & liable to cause inaccuracy, the risk of ruptures or blowups.
Case trimming specs are calculated to permit safe usage of firearms by avoiding such issues. Thus, you'll find loading manuals recommend trimming cases when they grow to a specified length. Those recommendations also include a standard minimum length to trim to. The manual I have on my computer bench doesn't have your cartridge included, but the parent .284 case is shown with an OAL of 2.170" & a trim to length of 2.160".
I can't figure any easy way to determine what case neck length you might have (other than refer to the reamer specs), but even that or a chamber cast isn't going to find you an OAL. On that basis, I'd be inclined to the theory that .005" off the end of the chamber is better than who knows what off the end of the chamber, riskwise, & trim to 2.170".