Its normal to take about .5 mm off the tip so that it doesnt crash into the back of the lock.
A bump key is a key in which all the cuts are at maximum depth. Bump keys are sometimes called '999' keys because all cuts are at maximum depth. (Dimple locks are 777 keys).
Normally, if you insert a key all the way into the lock, the pins inside the lock touch the deepest point of the cut in the key at the point where the shoulder of the key makes contact with the inner cylinder of the lock. By filing a tiny bit of metal off both the tip and the shoulder of the key, you can create a bump key that can go just a little bit deeper into the lock and is pushed out again a tiny bit by the force of the springs inside the lock, until the pins again rest on the deepest point in the key cuts. Filing off between 0.25 and 0.5 mm works best, it is very easy to take off too much.
Thanks to Barry Wells & Rop Gonggripj.
If you want a full transcipt of their work PM me.