johara1,
I totally understand the apparent contradiction you're describing. I'll do my best to explain as I understand it, but Eric (the bulletsmith) may correct me on some points related to fabrication.
The tooling used to make the original (thin jacket) 105 VLD was sized perfectly for that jacket and core. But with the thicker jacket, the core length was longer and didn't allow meplats to form consistently. The two available options were to either truncate the nose length so the meplats could be made consistently, or re-tool both the jacket lengths and dies for making this bullet with small meplats. The somewhat experimental direction of truncating the noses was taken. I say somewhat experimental because we wanted to see just how this addressed the consistency issue, as well as BC. The reduction in BC was disappointing but until the OP, we (I personally) have never heard of consistency issues with the meplats of these thick jacket 105 VLD's.
Part of the decision to truncate the nose was affected by the knowledge that we would soon have the 105 Hybrid available. The jackets and tooling for the 105 hybrid was designed from ground up around the thick jackets, so we were able to make them with the smaller meplats with no issues like we had with the thick 105 VLD's.
As to the effect of the crooked looking tips, I'll relay a true story that happened to me when I was about 16 years old hunting groundhogs with a .243 loading Sierra 70 grain MatchKings. I got a batch with visually crooked tips and called the tech line. They explained that the jacket is [weight] balanced/concentric before it's drawn, and that if the tip appears crooked, the mass is actually balanced. Any aerodynamic effect would be to minimal to notice. Naturally I thought they were feeding me a line of BS (I was 16...) so I filed the tips flat with a file. Lest anyone think that's a barbaric way to address a bullet, I'll have you know I did choose the 'fine' file over the coarse one. After 'fixing' the bullet tips to be nice and flat, I proceeded to the fields and proceeded to miss every groundhog I shot at for days. A trip to the range showed the bullets grouping like 3" at 100 (my usual was closer to 1"). The modified bullets were the only difference, so I went back and, cringing, loaded the crooked tips. Groups went back to 1" and groundhogs started dying again.
Now the above is purely anecdotal, but it was my limited experience with shooting crooked tip bullets. My advice is to (cringe if you have to, and) load them and give them a fair try. Others have reported no noticeable difference in precision with crooked meplats, but I would hesitate to say "it never matters".
I hope Eric can correct me if I relayed any inaccuracies related to the fabrication stuff.
Take care,
-Bryan