I hear you
@Milo 2.5 and consider you a reloading guru and much respect for that. I like to work up a load quick and use it for the duration. In my mind, a good rifle should be forgiving enough to give you at least an overall average .75 MOA until the shit hits the fan over the life of the barrel. Of course, less than .75 off the bat is the norm then it goes from there. I've become one of those old guys that don't really know my MV. Just the dope for that day. With that I can tell you approx. what it is. I can look at a group and say my SD is okay and that is about it. I've learned that run out should not be a problem. When I suspect it is I can measure some, index them with a sharpie, and shoot a group and tell from the before and after. But that is rare. I use only standard SAAMI spec barrels and dies. I like a little tolerance. And though interesting I never did start annealing. I end up with a sub MOA barrel until I retire it. Usually, right about where one would suspect but probably a little early and maybe obviously too late. My cleaning regime sucks and I went back to Hoppes #9 years ago. For copper I will splurge on KG12. The result is I'm still fucking with shit but I've seriously mellowed out trying to maintain a tack driver. Trying to squeeze that extra 1/3rd MOA in with a 1/10th mil click is a lot of work.
. One needs to be super competitive and plenty of trophies for that sort of effort. I see the masses watch those short-short videos and read those Internet articles from those champions using tight custom everything and we end up with countless threads why it is not working for everybody. It really takes countless hours of practice with a lot of failures to the point of perfection. Easier softer ways availed them nothing. So, if people want to go down that row they need to notice the years of patience these pros also put in before enrolling in their classes, making a free short video, or that one mouse click informative article or podcast. They can show you quickly fundamental mistakes, provide tips but they can't make a person put in the years. By that time the person to the left or right of you are not them. It is the next generation. Chances are it is already too late for most of us. We didn't start early enough and stuck with it. So, enjoy the hobby or sport and don't sweat the small stuff. Most of us simply don't have the talent and too lazy to put in the time for that top shelf level. It is not just the recipe and boom you're a professional. And I started at the age of 11 when my mother enrolled me at the local NRA YOUTH club to keep me out of trouble. That was 50 years ago.