Before trying to teach an engineer and physicist about thermal expansion you should probably consider that ceramics have a lower thermal expansion coefficient than metals.

What that means is that the metal tip with its ring like cross section will expand and increase the hollow space inside more than the ceramic is able to expand, therefore increasing the gap further, and NOT tightening it.
Now let's consider the worst case, in which the tip stays cold (doesn't expand at all) but the heater expands:
Ceramics typically have a coefficient less than 10 * 10ˆ-6 but let's again consider the worst case. The relative expansion at 480 C is (480-20)*10ˆ-6 = 0.0046. The absolute expansion for a heater diameter of 3.85mm is 0.0046 * 3.85mm =
18µm. The actual space between the heater and tip is about
50µm so go figure.
Of course, there is a combination of both volumetric and linear expansion, but since the coefficients are not that different, the rough estimation can't be that far off to change the conclusion.
Anyways, I am not saying the gap is huge (I should probably get a clone and check how loose is that) I am just saying that it COULD be better.