You might try the 'search' feature and expand the time factor...I know that in the past, there were some threads that included photos of examples, as well as good explanations for excessive pressure signs...
Usually, if you are starting to see your primers flatten out even with the base of the case, or the extraction starts presenting a problem, you can safely think that you are hitting the limit....
If you look at the spent cases and the lettering on the head stamp appears to have started to flatten, then you are probably quite a bit over pressure...Loose primer pockets on fairly new brass is another sign..
Obviously, split or separated cases should not happen with fairly new brass. It will happen once in a while with 'overworked' brass that has been reloaded and re-sized several times, unless you anneal them on a regular basis and even then the primer pockets will start to loosen up..
I have several thousand rounds of .223 brass, some new in the pouch, the rest is mostly once fired.... I generally will use 200 rounds that I will work with until it deteriorates and then pitch it and grab another 200...
I will prep a lot of it to the point of priming it and then store it so all I have to do is drop the powder charge and seat the bullet.. It's easier to keep track of the condition of the brass that way..