Hi Veral,
This question is on front driving band design.
As you state in your book, a heavy front driving band keeps things lined up and can take a lot of abuse not easily handled by shorter bands. It not only takes the knocks better than a short band, but also rests up in the leade a bit and helps alignment upon ignition. Shorter banded bullets tend to skip around a bit before they find their way into the throats.
In a .45 Colt cylinder, with .452" throats, a bullet sized .452" is not a slip fit but must be driven through with a mallet. Therefore the front band cannot be too long or the round will not chamber (all of this you know, but I am leading up to the question).
If the front driving band is .100" wide, yet the gun could conceivably take a .115" front band and still chamber the round, alignment could be a little better (i.e., the bullet will bounce off the leade before entering the throat). The wider the discrepancy, the worse the accuracy. As all chambers may not be cut exactly the same, and dirt and crud must be accounted for, however, front band width should be purposely made a little on the short side (i.e., .100" in a gun that could possibly handle .110" or .115").
A .451" bullet on the other hand is a nice slip fit through the throats. A bullet sized .451" could utilize a band long enough to pass the lead and actually enter the throat upon chambering, giving superior alignment. The front band could be .150" long, for example. Not that you would want it that long, necessarily, but my point is that it would chamber. The downside is that the seal may not be as good as the .452" bullet, perhaps.
Here is the question then: Have you ever tried a bullet with your recommended .100" long, full diameter (.452" in this example) front driving band, with another smaller section (maybe .050" long, at .451") just in front of the front band?
This would give the great seal and durability of a heavy full diameter front band as you so ably propound in your book, and vastly superior alignment at the same time in instances where the full diameter front band might normally bounce off the leade. The front driving band would still be able to take all the abuse, yet the .050" long section up front would help decrease battering on the front band even more. This both by giving near perfect alignment upon ignition and maybe even helping line things up a little when going into the forcing cone, like a cone fitting into a cone. Sort of a bore ride concept, without the downside traditional bore riders have of not having a wide, full diameter front band.
Of course, an additional benefit will be realized when sizing the bullets in the first place (if sized nose first, as in a Star Sizer). Instead of the bullet tipping and teetering a little when entering the sizing die, the slightly smaller front section would tend to help align it better, tending to slip into the die more easily. All the advantages that a nice, smooth ogive enjoys verses the sharp shoulder of a SWC design, with the ogive "advantage" extending out a full .050" giving you even better alignment than the more abrupt ogive.
If the above will not work in your opinion, would you advocate going with the .452" idea and having none of the front band up in the throat (albeit some of it will be in the leade)?
Or would you prefer the .451" approach, with a heavy wide front band, sitting past the leade up in the throats?
By the way, thanks for taking the time to answer questions on this site, and thanks for making a great product!