I fear my earlier reply to this question from Skookum got lost when my internet service went down.
I cannot foresee any possible deleterious effects of shifting the tripping ring back about an inch behind the tip of any rifle bullet. For those bullets which can benefit from adding such a ring, it would not matter where it is relative to the ogive/body junction or any other break in the surface angles. The boundary layer L/T flow transition occurs after about 1.25 to 1.5 inches of laminar flow even for a flat plate in a wind tunnel. By shifting the transition point back about an inch, more of the bullet would experience the significantly lower-drag laminar flow.
One could ask David about this change, since he probably tried it.
I cannot foresee any possible deleterious effects of shifting the tripping ring back about an inch behind the tip of any rifle bullet. For those bullets which can benefit from adding such a ring, it would not matter where it is relative to the ogive/body junction or any other break in the surface angles. The boundary layer L/T flow transition occurs after about 1.25 to 1.5 inches of laminar flow even for a flat plate in a wind tunnel. By shifting the transition point back about an inch, more of the bullet would experience the significantly lower-drag laminar flow.
One could ask David about this change, since he probably tried it.