Wouldn't it make more sense to just use the manufacturer's COL and then make sure the finished rounds pass the plunk test? Measuring off the rifling is great for match grade rifles, pointless for 9mm.
I suppose so if you want your loads unnecessarily short which means greater "jump" from the cartridge case into the Leade/Throat/Rifling. Just as with handloading for rifle, minimizing "jump" typically improves accuracy, and using a longer OACL without exceeding the Max, will reduce pressure. I work with Imperial and metric units and have found that with slower burning powders for the 9 x 19mm like Silhouette, True Blue and AA No 7, with a .010"/.25mm OACL length increase you can equalize pressure and velocity by adding .1 gr. per
a length increase of .010"/.25mm. Same in reverse when shortening, decrease by the same amount. As powder burn rate gets faster, or if you're using a fast burner, you should not change the powder charge. Predominatly, my loads and tests are geared toward defense, but wanting match grade accuracy as part of that. Likewise, I am partial to JHPs for autoloaders, particularly the 9 x 19mm to have longer, more slender and rounded ogives vs truncated cone shapes that typically require the shortest OACLs. If you're loading Plated bullets you'll need to use your press and seat in steps of small increments if you want to match OACL to the pistol's chamber. I rarely load anything other than JHPs or hardcast/polycoated SWCs, but every jacketed bullet I used gets tested for its OACL specific to the chamber, or chambers since all of mine are relatively close in length.
If your load will be used in multiple pistols, load for the one with the shortest chamber. Unless it is an unusual model, your handloads will be longer than what is typically used in handload data. Think about who SAAMI is? They're both data providers and ammunition manufacturers. Their ammo and their data must consider the shortest possible chamber the loads will be fired from, and essentially, one-size-fits-all. If that seems excessively labor intensive, that's up to the handloader. But if you load for rifles, you're likely doing the same thing anyway. And buying cartridge gauges is a waste of time and $ for me. The best cartridge gauge you can use is the chamber in your pistols barrel.
Also, the plunk test alone is not enough. In some cases with truncated cone type JHPs like SIERRAs and the XTP the shoulder hitting the leade will also "plunk". You need to make sure that after the "plunk" the round will easily spin in the chamber.
This is also worth mentioning: through the gen 3s (haven't tested a gen4) Glock used chambers that allow OACL to be longer than what will fit in your magazine. Same for SIG, IME. So the "Marksman" barrel of the genV was basically a shortening of the chamber to get better accuracy from the shorter OACLs typical of commercial ammo.