I may be a bit behind the times, but, I was taught from a very early age never to shoot with a wet chamber and/or wet cartridges as it would increase the pressure on the locking lugs. Rear lockers like the SMLE were the most dangerous, even stretching the action

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The reason given was that water is 'incompressible' and the case would never grip the chamber walls.
My gut feeling is that the actual firing would not generate heat quick enough to turn the water to steam so, effectively, it is not only a lubricant, but, it would stop the case expanding to the chamber dimensions therefore increasing pressure, albeit it slight.
Also, if the pressure was high enough, could it not push the bolt head back just that minute amount to give the projectile extra jump which would change the fine tuning on a particular load, more so if the projectile was jammed? We are dealing in milliseconds here.
Just asking.
I see BATattack has posted while I have been typing.