The point of the exercise is the bullets get seated by the stem on your bullet seater. It contacts the exact same dimension on the nose of each of the bullets. So even though there are variations in the base to ogive measurement among your bullets, the Bullet stem places the bullets to the same spot. Which is why measuring bullets base to ogive is a waste of time.
Bart

I agree about measuring bullets BTO's as any difference in jump is NOT a issue for me since I don't load my cartridges to touch or jam the lands. But I do sort my bullets from the base to the point where my seater stem makes contact with the bullet. Since consistent seating depth is a big deal, I want my bullets seated to the same depth in every case case. Sorting this way works really well and it give me very consistent cartridges even though the CBTO can vary.
I will sort my bullets by the method above in groups +/- .001. Like you've shown, it not unusual to have outliers, which I will use for fouling the barrel after a good cleaning or set them aside to be used for fire forming.I know this topic has been discussed many times and I have read most of the threads regarding it, but I haven't seen much regarding how people actually group their bullets. I just measured 200 Berger 105gr Hybrids all from the same lot, using a Hornaday comparator mounted on a Mitutoyo "Absolute" caliper. Here is what I found:
View attachment 1290476
What I am looking for is a better understanding of how fine/course to group these. I am really considering just throwing them all together, since 99.5% fall within .004 and 86.5% fall within .002. Frankly, I doubt I can shoot the difference here. My discipline is primarily 600 yd. F-class.
Any thoughts would be appreciated.