This is what I was thinking with that data. Correct me if I'm wrong.
Let's say on bullet A the distance from where CBTO is measured (the bullet comparator) and where the seating stem impacts the bullet is .275". And on bullet B that same measurement (the distance from where the stem impacts the bullet to where CBTO is measured) is .265".
When the bullet is seated it is seated to the height as specified by where the stem impacts the bullet. The stem knows nothing about the ogive, since it is physically below where the stem contacts the bullet.
Therefore, when measured with the bullet comparator to determine CBTO the round with seated bullet B will have a CBTO .010" LONGER than the round seated with bullet A......since in bullet B the ogive is .010" closer to where the seating stem impacts the bullet as compared to bullet A.
I agree - the bullet base is floating in the case and doesn't impact CBTO measurement. What I'm pointing out is inconsistency in the difference between where CBTO is measured and where the stem contacts the bullet.
That's the model I have in my head. Please chime in if I'm off base.
You are exactly right. Measuring CBTO does not always allow consistent seating. It's where the seater stem contacts the bullet and where the bullet contacts the rifling, which is very often not where typical ogive tools measure.
A fellow LR BR shooter, who also shoots SR BR, has developed several tools that many top competitors use.
He makes a comparator that measures the bullet where the seater stem contacts it (seater ogive or SO), and another comparator that measures where the bullet contacts the chamber (chamber ogive or CO). These two places on the bullet are not usually where a typical ogive tool contacts the bullet. He also make a comparator for a caliper that matches the seater stem (SO) tool.
When bullets are sorted by SO and CO, they all seat the same and all have the same distance from the chamber.