Some bullet designs are worse than others for this problem.I've had lots of situations in tight chambered firearms, that won't chamber that last little bit with powder coating.
The first bit of the ogive is now larger and resizing doesn't touch it.
The NOE sizing system has a unit with which you can size the nose portion a bit. I haven't had good luck with it.
I have a 6 cavity Lee 230 gr. RN mould which I bought to make pin shoot loads. It throws excellent quality bullets which I PC. They looked great. The first match I took them to was a disaster. I had used my Lee Factory Crimp Die to finish size and crimp the rounds and they all dropped nicely into a 45 ACP cartridge gauge so I thought I was good to go. In two matches I got off two shots (the first one in each match). The second round jammed in the chamber both times.
Previously I had been using Berry's 230 gr. RNCP bullets and they had worked fine. It turns out that the Lee 45 RN bullet has a very short ogive so when I seated them to the same depth as the Berry bullets which have a longer ogive it turned out that the short Lee ogive was jamming into the rifling before the case was fully chambered. When I 'plunk' tested the rounds in the barrel of my Kimber Stainless II Target none of them fully chambered. I now have to seat the bullets considerably deeper into the case so the ogive doesn't make contact with the rifling before the round is fully chambered. As deeper seating raises chamber pressure I also had to decrease the load somewhat to compensate.
Someone earlier commented that the best way to check the ammo is to use the barrel, not a gauge as chambers vary from gun to gun and that is good advice. It's the best way to guarantee that the rounds will actually chamber in a specific gun.



















































