For one, .002" crush does not mean .002" below flush.
Flush/below flush means nothing w/regard to crush.
And two, CCI has no idea what their primers should be seated at -in YOUR brass, because they haven't a clue about YOUR pocket depths.
CRUSH means seated to touching bottom of pocket + desired additional. This means measuring every single primer, and every single pocket each is to be seated in, and then measuring the actual seating.
K&M is the only seater I know of that provides this.
The 'proper' crush is beyond me as I haven't done alot of testing there.
But I do know that primers misfire without some amount of crush.
And I know it can depend on the strike the bolt provides, and the case headspacing needed. It's not about power, but speed(sharpness) of strike. Heavy pins, high viscosity spring lube(cold), pin travel causing the bolt handle to move(misaligned bolt turn), or anything moving forward with the strike(primer or case), can affect primer performance.
So with conditions unknown, I start at .002" crush, and bring the seater to the range. If I get misfires, I seat the next 10 .001" deeper, until all are firing well. That's it, I just seat till they are reliable & log it.
Maybe some day I should do some testing..
I've never used anything but the K&M. It's a nice seater, but I notice it would be impossible to seat with it, to a set crush, -by feel. No Way.
It would be interesting to do some testing with the Sinclair wonder seater that looks so nice. I could measure things out with the K&M, seat by feel with Sinclair, and remeasure to see how I did with the K&M.
But I can't see spending so much on a seater that I highly doubt can seat with K&M's precision.
Anyway, as far as consistant seating w/resp to 'flush', this of coarse could be achieved with pockets milled to a standard depth. So if not acounting for primer thickness variance, I would at minimum uniform the pockets ..