By any chance would you happen to have any valuable info to share on the validity of the various ogive comparator tools that have been sold for some time which in most instances would be used to sample more than 3 rounds of ammo.
Although the question (the sentence above should end with a question mark) wasn't directed specifically at me, I would be happy to share some insights on comparators with you.
Avoid the type that are like a large nut with six different caliber sized holes drilled on each side. They tend not to be very accurate. Shy away also from caliber sized comparators in general. Why? - because first contact on the bullet ogive will be with the lands and these are sub-caliber to the bore. As an example, 6mm (0.243) lands are 0.236 or 0.237 inch depending on the barrel. Thus, a comparator that measures 0.243 would be off if using CBTO or sorting bullets by BTO. The higher priced comparators take this into consideration.
If you can handle the initial cost, a much more useful tool than a comparator that clamps to the jaws on your calipers and measures from a datum on the bullet ogive rearward, is a bullet comparator that the bullet is inserted into and measures differences in ogive curvature going forward. Now we're getting somewhere because we really want to know where the land diameter will fall on each bullet and make this as consistent as possible. The scale reading on these tools is usually 0.0001 inch.
As an illustration of how this tool is used in practice, the bullet on the dummy around used to find the touch point on the lands is used to zero the dial indicator on the bullet comparator tool. Next, bullets are measured and sorted to some desired value around the zero point. Generally, I use ± 0.0005 inch around the zero point. Bullets greater than ± 0.001 from zero are sorted into groups and the bullet seating die can be adjusted accordingly to seat these bullets at the same depth as the reference bullet. This is how one may eliminate differences in bullet ogive.