2.800" is a OAL that will allow the round to fit any magazine.
In the case of a Remington rifle, 2.820" will still fit.
If you plan on using the magazine, measure it and note that MAX length. Your ammo should always be at least 25 thou shorter than that.
BUT, that length might be too long for the chamber throat. You might need a shorter length.
What I do with a new rifle, is load the first round at 2.900 and try to chamber it. if I feel resistance, or if it chambers and I then see rifling marks on the bullet, I put that round aside and and turn the seater in a quarter turn (or more) and seat the next bullet.
I keep doing this until I see just a faint start of rifling marks on the bullet. I note that OAL and call it the "bullet hard into the rifling" distance. I then turn the seater down a half turn and verify that that distance leaves no marks on the bullet. I note that OAL as the "Bullet off the Rifling" distance.
Then I take the collection of longer rounds used in steps above, and seat them all to the last setting, and then carry on loading all the ammo.
if you plan on using a magazine, load a round short enough to fit the mag, and then chamber it to see if that length clears the rifling. If it does not, seat successive rounds deeper, as above, unto there are no rifling marks on the bullets.
The 2.800" in the book is a short OAL that will fit most rifles. It would be like selling only size 13 boots, because all feet will fit. You want a longer length round, but it still ah to fit YOUR mag and YOUR chamber. The procedure above will find that OAL for you. And write the results in your logbook.
I have a rifle in which 2.800" leaves rifling marks. And I have another that needs an OAL of 2.925"