Here is the procedure I used:
I measured the OAL of a 100 rnd box of 168gr Amax and sorted them by the result.
There was only three sizes that resulted (and bear with me if I am a lil off cause I am going by memory),
1.113, 1.114, 1.115, of which over half were .114 and only about five were .115.
I then proceeded to load ten rounds. I can't remember right off which ones I used, but they were all the same OAL.
I have a Lee seating die. With it in my press with the top removed and the seating stem/plug out, I place one of my cases in the shell holder, raise the ram to its full up position, and screw the die down just until it comes to rest very slightly snug against the case mouth. The die its self never touches the shell holder.
I then remove that case and put in my dummy round, place the plug on top of the bullet and then screw the top on until it makes firm contact with the plug.
I then seat a bullet in a freshly charged case and measure the COAL. I realise that it is not the best way to judge distance to the bearing surface, but is currently the only way I have to judge. I adjust the die down slowly until that bullet is seated the distance I want, and load another one to this setting. My usual result is it MIGHT be the same as the first one, or it is longer or shorter, but usually longer.
I determined, which was easy enough to do, that when the bullet is being pressed in to the case, the plug is applying the pressure pushing it downward at a point roughly 3/16" to 1/4" from the tip.
I always surmised that the right close to the tip is likely where most bullets vary the most in their dimensions, due to them being swaged or formed that direction, and the pug pushing from this area is causing a lot of the variance. So, I removed the plug and bored out the hole out as large as I thought I could get away with. Now it pushes the bullets from a point a lil past halfway from the tip, or, closer to the bearing surface.
This yield me the same results, and as best as I can figure, most every seater I've seen applies pressure in the same general area between one of the ones I have mentioned. But then again, wouldn't that leave evreyone else with the same problem? It seems that even if I measured and sorted bullets with a comparator that measured from the bearing surface, when I seated the bullets, I would still have the variance that is the difference in dimensions from where the pressure was actually being applied. Isn't that correct? Is there a die that seats closer to the bearing surface? Or is the remedy seating the bullets slightly long, and then using a comparator on each round and seating them all individually (like with a micrometer seater for ease) until they measure the same length with the comparator?
I did also use the plug as a comparator to measure some of the sorted bullets. I found slight variations amongst them, even though OAL-wise, they were the same. I would have to double sort bullets, and that would be a major PITA, but is that what I need to do?
Keep in mind that I realise my equipment is a lil under par, as far as where I would like it to be. I'm fairly new to this, and I am slowly but surely working to acquire better tools as I can, so I welcome honest opinions and tips towards equipment replacement/recommendations, especially if it will help keep me from making the wrong investment.