If you haven't tried it yet, I'd recommend trying some rounds loaded to a larger than usual jump... in the neighboorhood of as much as ~0.100" off or more.
The accuracy might surprise you and I can pretty much bet your barrel will last longer, all while yielding a more consistent/repeatable waterline downrange at distance the whole time and a more "durable" load that you may not ever have to touch.
I loaded my last barrel jumping 0.100" to the lands, and ran it kind of "slow" for a 6mm Creedmoor (~2900fps), and my notorious barrel-burner made it 2300rds before it died (pretty nuts for 6 creed). I didn't have to touch/change the load even once over the whole life of the barrel. I ended up feeding it the same load/round from start to finish and at the end their was hardly much throat errosion to speak of, it was just the inevitable fire-cracking that eventually/finally killed it I think.
These are shots #96-#100 through my new barrel, rounds were left over from the last barrel so they are jumping ~0.100" or so (same model Proof prefit), the barrel hasn't even had enough rounds through it to have settled in yet speed-wise, zero barrel break-in (I don't believe in that nonsense, I just screw it on, single dry patch and go), no load development at all:
I don't know what groups look like at 100 yards yet, and I'm not sure I care lol!