Chamber pressure is going to be higher. The longer bullet will take up more case and raise the chamber pressure.
Actually, much of the pressure change is due to the fact that the heavier bullet simply doesn't move as quickly. So, same powder, same burn rate, same seating depth; the heavier bullet moves less over time, giving you less volume in the same elapsed time as the lighter bullet, and thus more pressure.
This is why the heavier bullets generally require less powder. If you don't reduce powder charge, you increase pressure, no matter HOW deeply the bullet is seated.
But...until it MOVES there's no recoil force at all...and once it DOES move, its a combination of how fast it moves and how hard it resists movement that determines recoil.
So yes, heavier stuff recoils more than light stuff at the same speed.
Of course, if you seat deeper AND load heavy...bad things can happen.
What I'm saying is that if you loaded a: 95 grain 9mm bullet with .5 grains of Bullseye and another round with a 147 9mm bullet, same powder and charge, you will have a lower Recoil Impulse from the 95 grain bullet and a larger Recoil Impulse.
That may be true, or may not, but it's pointless, as it may not even move things. The bullet and gasses have to move, preferably leave the barrel to produce recoil.
This link has a chart where they used power factor to measure things.
http://www.shootingtimes.com/reloading/power-factor-recoil-bullet-weight-gives-edge/#ixzz417QC2wXB
Heavier bullets with the SAME power factor as lighter bullets recoiled identically to the light bullets. The speed (due to powder charge and pressure) was the major change...slower heavy bullets don't recoil more than fast light bullets if the energy at the muzzle is the same.
The same powder charge, once it's enough to get past equilibrium levels, WILL provide more pressure behind the heavier bullet. That pressure MIGHT move the heavy bullet faster than a lighter bullet, but there will be a range of pressure and resulting velocity where the heavy bullet won't move fast enough relative to the light bullet to increase recoil, and so recoil with the heavy bullet won't be greater.
That's because the powder charge is the same in these Commercial Loadings.
I doubt this is true, as that would mean either the lighter bullets are stupid slow, or the heavy bullets are HIGHLY pressurized.
Not buying that, at all.
Chamber Pressure doesn't equate to recoil. Not with the came charge, in the same cal and brass.
It doesn't equate, but it contributes, as it affects velocity.