Update:
Well, I made my decision. 20" it was.
First some of the backstory. I was at the range one morning with my 5-R milspec. Had set up my chronograph and used a laser bore-sighter to speed the process. A cheap Bushnell that gets stuck in the muzzle. To cut the story short, I overlooked the fact it was still there when I fired my first shot. Didn't notice anything other than the fact that my chronograph didn't register the thought. I thought that the muzzle blast might have moved it so I went back out to adjust the chrono. Worked great for the rest of the day.
When I got ready to pack up I picked up the case for the bore-sighter and WTF? Where did I leave it. It then dawned on me that it had gone down range. I took a look down the bore and checked the outside of the barrel for damage and noted none. Went home, kicking myself in the ass all the way.
At the next range session I noticed that I was having a heck of a time getting small groups, even with known loads. Rifle usually shoots sub .5 moa, even on a bad day.
When I got home I did some serious checking of the barrel and bore. About 3" from the crown there was an obvious ring. CRAP!
So then I started thinking, 20" bbl? 18"? Well, based on the comments here, and reading the SWAT article I decided to go 20". Two hacksaw blades later and about 20 minutes to cut a new crown (I have an 11 degree crown cutting "reamer" from Brownell's with pilot), I was ready to go back to the range. I had 'slugged' the bore and it was perfect at the end of the barrel. On the piece I had cut off a bullet would drop 3/4 of the way into the bore and only stop when it hit the "pressure ring".
At the range, what a difference. The first shots fired were with two loads I had shot the previous week with unsatisfactory results.
Here are the before and after targets. Rifle is a Rem 5-R Milspec shot from a Sinclair Tactical Bipod up front and a sandbag at the rear.
42 gr. H-4895 with Hornady 178gr A-Max 2.820" OAL (shot one missed target, shot two was high. 3,4,5 were grouped and only those used for measurement)
2" target spot
After cutting the barrel and re-crowning, here's the same load, Shot one was excluded from the measurements shown as the scope was adjusted after it was fired.
1" target spot
Here's another comparison with a load I've been working with. CFE223 with the same Hornady 178gr A-max. Needs some tuning as this load was developed using the old Latin method known as "extractamus ex wazoo". I just looked at some load data then took a guess. Had some extra rounds after firing the first batch with the damaged barrel so I thought it might make a nice comparison.
Before (
2" target spot
After (
1" target spot
On this "un-tuned" load, getting rid of the damaged portion reduced the group size by 75% (to .537 MOA from 2.119 MOA)
On a further note, this rifle has had many, many, rounds through it's barrel. I quit counting but best guess is that since I bought the rifle 5 years ago it's close to 8k (and bullet purchases confirm that's close). If I can still get .212 MOA groups out of it, I won't be replacing the barrel soon.
I just need to keep better track of my bore-sighter