There are usually a lot of "ifs" involved in making generalizations about things such as optimal seating depth for a given type of bullet in different rifles, especially if you are jumping the bullets (i.e. bullets seated off the lands). IF the barrel length is similar, IF the rifling is similar, IF the velocity is comparable, IF you're hitting the same node, etc., etc., etc., it wouldn't be all that shocking shocking to see two similar rifles tune in with a given bullet seated at a similar distance off the lands. In fact, it is quite common to see loads for .308 Win F-TR rifles, which by design tend to be quite similar, if not almost identical, tune in at very close to the same seating depth with a given bullet and powder.
Nonetheless, as David suggested, it should be a standard practice during load development to determine optimal seating depth for your specific setup. Like David, I generally test from about .003" to .030" off the lands in .003" increments. Of the various 0.224" and 0.308" bullets I use, I have yet to find one that didn't tune in within that window. For that reason, I typically start charge weight testing with a new bullet at .015" off the lands, which is basically halfway in between the two seating depth test bookend measurements (.003" to .030" off the lands). That way, if you test seating depth after optimizing charge weight, you're not moving the bullet more than half the total seating depth test range in either direction. In my hands, that is not enough to appreciably change effective case volume or velocity, so I don't have to re-optimize charge again after doing a seating depth test.
In any event, a generalization about the preferred seating depth for a given bullet might be useful in terms of choosing a starting point, but seating depth is such a critical part of optimizing precision that you always want to test it yourself. Further, optimal seating depth will likely change over the life of a barrel as land erosion occurs, so you need to check it periodically. Carrying out a fine increment seating depth test is really not very painful in the grand scheme of things, and once it's done, then you know for sure, until it's time test and adjust it again.