I have a sporter and have mixed feelings about it.
first.. its more consistent than my optical shooting crony which is very sensitive to lighting changes, shadows, gases if not placed far enough away.. etc.. and its too much hassle to set up a lighting box around it.
BUT the sporter effects my group size and POI severely.. POI shift is .8MIL .. thats right MIL .. on average about 3" high at 100 ... routinely on my 308.. a bit different on my 6.5-284N. the weight at the end of the barrel acts similar to a bench rest barrel tuner .. and a theory is also that the bullet interacts with the surface of the bayonet like an aircraft wing in ground effect generating lift...
that said here are my thoughts on if you NEED one
if you have a known distance range that you can get access to frequently and cheaply and out to AT LEAST 500 yards than you MAY not need it.. provided you are willing to go out and dope your rifle. In the military.. generally you don't normally see chronos... its all pretty much done with dope... and to be honest.. even with the best chrono data... actual dope is FAR MORE RELIABLE.. as it take into account/shows you the effect of positive/negative compensation (slower bullets you WANT to hit higher on a target) .. more info here
http://www.geoffrey-kolbe.com/articles/rimfire_accuracy/tuning_a_barrel.htm with factory ammo you can't control this as its a function of barrel timing and reloaders can adjust with seating depth mostly.. but powder as well.
shooting at long range will allow you to build reliable ACTUAL dope for that range and velocity can be trued/estimated by walking numbers back.. but if you can't shoot all the way out to your terminal ranges you won't be able to fully define your compensation.. that is why some of the best bench rest 1000 yard guys tune their loads at that distance and not shorter. for example.. lets say the following..
if you have a 25 fps velocity spread.. and the slowest rounds hit .5 moa high at short range like 100 yards.. that is positive compensation which is desirable .. but . it will be high out to a certain distance then cross back through the average trajectory line and begin hitting low.. at some distance. you can work the 'what if's' on a the JBM ballistics web site or a ballistic calculator. run a table out to 1000 yards in moa/min and INCHES at a velocity average. then run another with the velocity 25 fps slower.. but also put in a zero compensation that is .5" high at the 100 zero range. you will see a positive.. slower hitting higher compensation to a point then drop back down.. there will be a point where the 25fps slow rounds hit exactly where the fast ones do..
long and short.. there is no golden bullet other than many regular bullets shot down range at distances and conditions to be expected and doped into a log book.
chrono data can HELP get you on target but it can't contain all the answers...
if you do forgo a chrono and decide to dope.. or hell even with a magneto buy your ammo in big same lot quantities otherwise the data is useless as it will change sometimes significantly lot to lot...