Glad the H1000 is working well for you.
As for the NSWC Crane development of the A191 round, you have to remember that happened in the late-80s to early 90s. H1000 wasn't proven then. Not sure it existed then or not. I do remember in 91 we were given the remnants of Crane's testing of D46 170gr Lapua bullets for 7.62 rounds (after the JAG rulings were released). They shot well, just not as well rifle-to-rifle as the SMKs. Also remember that Crane is developing ammo that consistently shoots well across literally hundreds of rifles in both the NSW and Match inventories (this was before Crane was the SOCOM Depot supplier). That same document detailed the attempt to use the 185gr D46 to replace the POOR-performing spun-nose ammo, but its long-range accuracy wasn't as good as desired. I remember shooting hand-me-down A170, which was the spun-nose 308/168gr Federal Match (before Gold Medal, red/white boxes). That stuff SUCKED about as bad as Special Ball. The D46 was about the only decent match FMJ on the market at the time, so it was natural to try it.
Pretty sure you'll find the 190/220gr SMK was relied on heavily because it is more length tolerant than the 210. Again, there are hundreds, if not thousands of rifles/barrels/chambers this ammo has to consistently shoot thru. From the MK248 Mod 1 Detail Spec:
3.5.3 Cartridge overall length. (M102) [The nominal overall length of the assembled cartridge shall be 3.500 inches maximum, 3.450 inches minimum] in accordance with drawing 53711-8330252.
The distance from the cartridge case head to the 0.300 inch diameter datum on the projectile ogive shall be controlled to within ± 0.010 inches. The nominal overall length and the distance from the cartridge case head to the 0.300 inch diameter datum on the projectile ogive of the assembled cartridge shall be established, within the above limits, by the manufacturer to meet performance requirements.
Keeping the ogive in a +/-.010" band
and OAL in a +/- .050" band across millions of rounds!