I have Hodgdon Leverelution powder and some Hornaday projectiles. Upta camp and I can't remember which ones. Have some factory ammo on hand but wanted to make some too. The Super 16 Carbine was stout recoil but not to rude. My 760 was mild recoil with factory ammo. I don't plan on doing any hot loads with this cartridge. Such a historical cartridge I had to have it. My boy has my Grandfather's 336CS.
My 336 in 35 Remington I loaded 43 grains of leverevolution with the 200 gr Hornady flex tips. . Just over an inch at 100 yards with a 2-7 leupold. Good thing about a 35 , no reason to hot rod it they kill deer just fine
There might not be a need to as far as killing, but I would argue there's certainly a reason to in suitable rifles. It has plenty of benefits.
The anemic book pressures in a 35 Remington are not cartridge based, but rather on the rifles they were chambered for in 1906 and moving forward to much later until other rifles came on the scene.
Most books that show PSI rather than cup, the majority of top loads do not even hit 30,000 PSI. That very low pressure can create it's own set of issues with repeated handloading and the 35 Remington's paper clip of a shoulder bump to headspace off of.
A Remington 760 for example in every other cartridge it's chambered for save for the 222, operates at 60,000-65,000 PSI.
I'm loaded at around a predicted pressure of 40,000 PSI in my 760. The current box of brass I'm working on has been reloaded 5X now at that loading. No signs of slowing down anytime soon. I imagine as long as I don't push the shoulder back more than barely touch it, and keep it annealed so the necks don't work harden, the brass will go on and on at that mild pressure but still enough pressure to keep it properly formed to my chamber.
Far as killing power, I'm 300 FPS faster than rated factory with the 200 gr Remington CL. For deer shot out to 150 yds so far, it certainly doesn't hurt from what I've experienced. I absolutely love that setup.