In a true beach-seat chamber the cartridge part is still the same as in a normal chamber, then it is reduced in dia. forward to the bullet dia. (ie. groove dia. + .0005" of the rifling) so there is no transition for the bullet to have to pass though. Some of these throats are tapered, rather than cylindrical, as in a typical ballseat. The lubed bullet is pushed into the throat and sits just a bit in front of the cartridge, which is primed and charged, and often capped with a card and/or lube wad. As you can see, this lessens the opportunity for the bullet to do anything but drive true into and through the bore.
Some have had decent luck by breech seating a cast lead bullet, of the right size to fit the normal chamber throat, but oversize to the bore groove dia. I have successfully done just so with the standard H&R 38-55 chamber and a shortened, fire-formed case to sit behind the bullet with the bit of clearance to the bullet base.