Yeah, youre just not understanding.
You can totally take oal measurements with the hornady oal tool. Its in the damn name.
View attachment 7328207
Whether you measure base to ogive or base to tip your choice between those two is a complete independent variable than what hes talking about, his measurement would be .15 short on either coal or cbto.
I agree that the base to ogive is a better point of measure but thats neither here or there when both measurements would be .15 short, doesnt matter what the number displayed is if its not in relation to the lands or the mag length. COAL is
not "incorrect"
So OP, and to other people who dont know what they are talking about: The nose of the bullet where the copper gets pinched down can vary more than the full diameter bearing surface of the bullet. As such measuring off of the most consistent part of the bullet is preferred over the part that varies more. The ogive is technically the entire curvature of the nose but for reloading we care about where the bullet actually touches the barrel which is right in front of the full diameter on the nose.
View attachment 7328227
So the part labeled jump is going from the bullets bearing surface right just on the ogive to the lands where the barrels rifling begins which is where the bullet meets the barrel. When you are using the oal tool you are trying to find the point where the bullet touches the lands and you have zero jump so that you know where your bullet actually is in relation to the chamber.
View attachment 7328229
In your creed your barrel will have a .256 hole and then it will have some extra material scooped out to a .264 measurement. The bullet comparator is cut to measure right about on that ogive spot in the middleish of the lands, it should be something like a .260 hole with a slight amount of taper which puts you pretty close to the middle.
View attachment 7328236
Different bullet shapes will have different over all lengths and positioning from one another when measured from a consistent point such as the ogive. So the COAL number for an ELD bullet wont equal a number for a SMK bullet.
View attachment 7328222.
View attachment 7328223
View attachment 7328225
So to help diagnose the problem OP, follow 918s post about seating one long to see if it fits. I would also color the bullet with sharpie and the case neck and shoulders to see if its dragging prematurely somewhere.
You could have a varmint reamer with very little freebore by design or possibly a reamer with no freebore intended to be followed by a throating reamer so to say its impossible is wrong too. But more likely its off center, fat case necks, just dragging, could be any number of things. Sharpie is a nice visual indicator of what or at least where its hitting inside the chamber out of sight.