Charles,
I disagree (hopefully not too disagreeably) , with what you wrote about the definition of jam. IMO jam is the longest that a particular bullet can be seated, at a particular neck tension, in a particular barrel, without the overall length of the loaded round being decreased as the bolt is being closed during the chambering of the round. (Yes, more than a bit wordy) From this we get the common reference (in benchrest parlance) of someone saying that he is seating some distance off of jam. Unfortunately jammed has been used to mean into the rifling, in some cases, to any degree longer than where the bullet just touches the rifling. I picked up what I think to be the correct definition, decades back, from my earliest reading in Precision Shooting magazine, and I have found most of the in print uses within benchrest writings to be consistent with it. If one prefers to use the point where a bullet just makes contact with the rifling as a starting point I think that it would be better if he would say that his bullets are seated whatever amount longer than touch or touching rather than jammed the same amount. If on the other hand, if one judges the correctness of a definition by how it is most commonly used, the internet has made published writers of the world, and by sheer numbers alone the original meaning may have been out voted down to a lower level on the theoretical list of definitions.
Boyd