I had this same question a while ago and went through the same thing thinking that because I was using the comparator to measure the ogive (which I thought was the exact spot on the bullet where it would contact the lands of the barrel) that as long as I used the comparator that I would be measuring to that same diameter on each bullet no matter which shape they were, and therefore could use the same measurement... Which I did, and it only took one loaded round of the new load I was starting with 52gr smk to visually notice that something was off compared to the 55gr spire points I had took my original measurement with. I stopped working on the load and did some research and talked to a few people and actually tried to argue my point to several guys with decades more experience than me who had simply said "no you have to measure each type of bullet". Finally someone explained that the comparators were not a specific diameter, they were close but if you were to take several different brands of comparators and use each one to measure the "ogive" of the same round each one would measure slightly different. The comparator is not used to measure the exact beginning of the ogive but rather to give a consistent point to measure at along the ogive so that you can relate that measurement to your cartridges overall length at which that particular style of bullet is contacting that particular barrel. If any of this is wrong someone please correct me because like I said I had trouble with this for a while also.
Also if anyone could verify this id appreciate it. Say you insert your OAL tool into the chamber with your 308 casing and a 155 smk and seat it out to the lands like normal, but when using the comparator to measure it instead of the .30 cal bushing that is needed that would seat further back on the bullet close to the beginning of the ogive at nearly .30, say I used a .22 cal bushing. I know this is no longer measuring near the beginning of the ogive where the bullet would be contacting the lands and therefore would cause huge measurement differences between that 155 smk and say something like a 190 RN but as long as the .22 bushing was used when checking OAL of your loaded rounds also, would it not be essentially taking the same measurement but just using a different reference point. I ask because that is how I kinda had to explain it to myself to understand that the comparator was not measuring where the bullet actually contacted the barrel but was only giving a constant point to measure against. Thanks in advance for any feedback and hopefully I'm not still wrong and further confusing anyone.