i had the same question and did some testing. gun is a 22 br, no turn. i "found" the lands using the hornady device using the modified case. i neck sized with a .248 redding bushing and loaded dummy round. neck was .250 in diameter.. seated bullet .040 thous longer than measured lands and chambered. the bullet was pushed back by .015 thous. tried several and the push back was not always .015 and i suspect this could represent a variance in neck tension, even though i used the same bushing. i seated the bullet at .020 thou into the measured lands and rechambered...all stayed and no bullet was pushed any deeper. there were good lands engraving on the bullets, so i am using this combo for the gun and it shoots one hole. "soft seating" is not consistent. if neck tension is too light, the bullet will seat and barely engraves, while more tension and some seat .005 or so and some more and groups will vary. expecting a bullet to self seat to the same point may not be realistic increasing neck tension(bullet grip) will allow deeper seating without bullet pushback. using the above test lets me find the into lands point where bullets stay put. also of interest, you can seat the non moving bullet by .005, polish it with 4-0 steel wool and rechamber. note the lands engraving, reseat .005, polish and rechamber. keep doing this until no engraving noted and THIS is the true lands position...my hornady device is often at odds with this process.