I've found the recoil on my 325PD to be...faster...than my 625. Not painful at all, just quick.
The downside is that I had a bullet pull from the case at the range (or more accurately, the case pull off the bullet), tying up the cylinder and thereby the gun. The bullet was easily removed by pulling it out the front of the cylinder.
It was only the fourth round, 3 having been fired before it.
Examining the bullet, Independence 230 FMJ, there was a substantial groove around it from the case crimp, and it wasn't merely an undersized bullet or oversized case.
Yes, I know Independence ammo is not the best.
Nonetheless, if you are using a 325PD as a CCW, I'd do some measuring of your favorite ammo...measure OAL of a particular cartridge BEFORE firing, then place it 6th in the queue, and measure OAL again having fired the previous five.
Having fired thousands of ACPs out of Ruger Blackhawk convertibles and S&W 625s, this is the first instance of a pulled bullet for me. There's no doubt the heavier all-steel revolvers simply recoil slower than the 325PD.