Pistol "class" bottle necked rounds back in the day like the .44-40, .38-40, .32-20, and 25-20, had a slight bottle neck and a tapered body for a reason.
The slight bottle neck helped the cartridge seal to the case mouth much faster at the comparatively low black powder pressures. That reduced fouling in the chamber and reduced extraction forces.
The tapered body ensured that as soon as the cartridge started to move aft during extraction, the entire case came out of contact with the chamber, and that also reduced extraction forces.
Those features allowed them to be used in lever action rifles.
The lack of those features on the .45 Colt is why there was never a Model 1873 or Model 1892 chambered for .45 Colt back in the black powder era. However, the straight walled design of the .45 Colt allowed it to maximize powder capacity. Ejection was achieved by an ejector rod, which meant the rim was only there for headspace, and could be kept small to minimize cylinder diameter. However, even with rod ejection in the SAA, Colt tapered the chamber by .007" to reduce ejection forces, which is why case life is poor for the .45 Colt.
Another downside of a bottle necked case is that they tend to grow a lot more than straight wall cases. Over the last 43 years I've loaded .32 ACP, .380 ACP, 7.62 Nagant, .30 Carbine, 9mm Luger, .38 Special, .357 Magnum, .45 ACP, .45 Colt and .45 Win Mag as well as .38-55, .375 Win and .45-70 by the thousands, tens of thousands or in the case of 9mm and .38 Special well over a hundred thousand and I've never trimmed cases. The necks crack or the case body gets spider cracks before they ever grow enough to need trimming.
That is not the case with a bottle necked case.