I've had many 1911's over the years and the one thing they had in common was a desire to have SWC bullets seated at different depths for each one. Same with my 97. That's just the way it is when you're using bullets that were never intended for use in autos.
I have to admit things can be tricky with SWC. And some bullets will simply not run reliably in a given gun and one has to give up. Sometimes it is the smart thing to do.
But please compare the following two bullets:
Both are swaged and copper plated. After plating the right one will be calibrated and the left one plastic coated with transparent material by the manufacturers. I started with the left one and tried every possible length from the shoulder just barely protruding from the case to as long as the cartridge would just fit into my magazines. My 1911 would never reliably feed this bullet. Several years later I bought some packages of the right ones because of bullet shortages. While I mentally prepared for lots of misfeeds to my utter surprise these bullets never jammed on me in the 1911 regardless of OAL. Years ago I used to experiment a lot with OAL and loads to find the perfectly precise cartridge for my gun. I could then do this without even caring for possible jams.
My 97 will shoot any RN bullet and ANYTHING in the modern hollow point defensive lines so there's just no point in fighting to make the SWC work when there are far better more reliable options.
According to your bullet preferences you seem to be reloading for self defense purposes. I do not doubt the reliability of the 97 or any other quality 1911 with those bullet shapes. If these bullets are what you prefer or what fills your needs then there is no reason to mess with the gun or fight non-existing problems.
I shot several packages of Magtech 230gr SWC cartridges through my 97. They ran without any problems while at the same time my handholds would cause huge problems. So why still use 200gr handloads?
Because my hobby is target shooting and therefore I load for
maximum precision combined with moderate recoil and
nice sharp precise holes as are made by (semi-) wadcutters. Why the latter? If two or more shots hit at the almost same place on the target with round nose bullets it is extremely difficult to judge if two bullets caused that slightly bigger hole or if maybe one or two shots are to be considered missing. With SWC bullets this risk goes away.