No problem, buddy. In the big picture of things, the number amount of jump is pretty much irrelevant. What matters is the amount of jump the works for that bullet in your chamber.
When I did a seating depth test for my Tikka T3x Tac A1, it has a long throat, so seating close to the lands was impractical. I tested 0.030, 0.060, 0.090, and 0.120. I ended up going with .90 because the 90 and 120 jumps shot best. That way, as the throat eroded away, I would have an area of jump that would stay at 90 and erode out to 120. Make sense?
I used the concept of the Berger Seating Depth Test and below were my results:
Full disclosure: I've never really done an actual seating depth test before in my 10 years of loading for bolt guns. I've only really tried to duplicate factory match ammo dimensions with better velocity, SD, and ES. It works, but I wanted to actually see what magic could happen. I'm going...
www.snipershide.com
VLD bullets are designed with a secant ogive. This ogive shape allows bullets to be more efficient in flight (retain more velocity = less drop and wind deflection). While this result is desirable for many rifle shooters the secant ogive on the VLD bullets produces another result in many rifle.
bergerbullets.com