I've seen that, and other, videos showing how the Hornady gauge "fixes" runout by supporting the round at both ends and then using the "bullet pusher" to adjust the bullet until the dial indicator shows an improvement. My comment was more to the point that something in the OP's reloading process is introducing runout and it would be better, IMO, to identify and correct that that rather than trying to fix rounds after the fact. In addition I suspect that all the Hornady gauge may be doing is transferring the runout away from the indicator though since I do not have one I can't confirm. Has anyone ever measured the runout on a round at several different places not just where the Hornady indicator is, noted those numbers and then "fixed it then go back through and remeasure, noting the new numbers to see how they line up with the originals? I would not be surprised to discover that the runout at the point where the Hornady gauge is set to measure has improved the runout elsewhere has degraded. Just some thoughts.