It doesn't. The meplat can be anywhere regardless of ogive radius.How does ogive difference correlate to meplat?
Also, there is not a direct correlation to ogive radius variance and CBTO.
There is a change of nose datums, which directly affects a BTO measure, but BTO is not CBTO.
An example for CBTO could be with seating a bullet having lower cals of ogive radius.
The stem would not ride up the nose as far, so it would seat the bullet in deeper. But, the CBTO tool also would not ride up the nose as far, so it would tend to make the bullet appear seated less, -except the bullet was seated deeper. So CBTO remains pretty much as you had set it.
Just opposite with a bullet that has greater cals of ogive radius, still stable in CBTO, due to this effective counter measuring.
Now add inconsistent seating forces, and you're back to variances in CBTO anyway...
If with this variance, the CBTO remains stable, bearing/base seating depths are varying, but rarely enough to matter. CBTO is far more important than normal variances in bearing depths.
Look at your calipers and set 5thou of what could be bearing seating variance. 5thou of neck length.
How much do you really think that matters to case capacity, or to neck tension?
Given all the other variables, I'm sure you could not prove to yourself that it matters.
	








					
				