Jim, we're talking past each other. You convinced me long ago, in the sense that I now have a Whidden repoint die, and I've always had meplat trimers -- actually, it was Dave's work that convinced me of the meplat trimmer, but you who got me to fork over the $300 or so for essentially the tiny little cylinder.
Now these are tools. Where I'm coming from is that the lot of 106 CRs that I had were darn near perfect. And they had tiny meplats, as small as one can get & still not lose knock-out pins in the point-up die -- about .050. I don't remember if you were still shooting 1K-BR when I had that rifle, but for a year, it won at least a relay every match out. A Hawk's Ridge relay, 10-11 people on the line, and most of them with good equipment. (Yup, that's anecdotal evidence.)
Based on the test with the tips Dave put in and the bullet strike, what I find hard to accept is the other CR-106 bullets printed 18-inches higher due to a change in drag (BC) alone. The plastic tips have essentially the same mepat diameter. And not much lead is taken out to put them in, they still weigh 104 or so. So I can't say what happened, but what I or anybody should accept as data would be firing these against the stock bullets over a 43, where velocity and BC (time of flight), plus the variations, are all available.
Moreover, I have two .30 caliber bullets made on the die R.G. and I came up with, the one used for the 187. OK, a .30 has a slightly larger meplat -- usually .062 is about as good as anyone will try -- and J-4 jackets usually give fuzzy points.
Now, one weight of those bullets, an experimental 187, prints significantly higher than the unmodified, fired the same day with the same load at Butner. The other one, a bit heavier, does not. I can't explain it, but there we are. Sample size a fair number of bullets, but just one rifle. And not shot over an Oehler 43.
For giggles some time, use your ballistics program to get a time of flight (or total drop) for the CR 106. Let's say they have a BC of .520. See how much you have to increase the BC to get a drop 18 inches less. If it is an unreasonable amount, something else must be going on.
Now it never hurts to have these tools. Often they'll help. It seemed to me the original poster kind of wanted a guarantee that they would always help, and that has not been my experience. Lord, he could try A-Max bullets and get the benefits for the cost of the bullet. If the new A-max shoots in his rifle, that'd end it.
Charles
Edit:
Another test, aside from the ballistics program, would be to run the bullets numbers in the JBM drag-twist program. Make no change to the bullet numbers except meplat diameter. Change it to .001 if you want. See what the program gives for the new B.C. Does it agree with the number from the ballistics program?
Now I understand this is modeling only, that real-world results must stand. But the models too have been proven to accurately predict. What I'm suggesting is that a change in the print of the bullet print alone is not the only test. That's where a 43 is helpful.