Phil, I'm not too surprised as that load will give quite moderate pressures. As I said in my post , I have years of experience shooting the 308 with N550 and been very happy with the outcomes. (I've just loaded up a range of charges in the powder under the old 175 SMK to test against the new Winchester StaBALL 'Match' so-called wonder-powder and hope to test both tomorrow.)
I have a former F/TR shooting friend who ran nothing but the old 210 Berger BTs and N550 over many years until he retired from the discipline and it worked very well for him providing a good trade-off between performance and barrel life. The 'problem' with N550 is that very high MVs are available in 308, which is a great thing as long as people understand there will almost certainly be a cost to them once they pass a certain performance point. There are those who know exactly what they're doing in such loads and take every last available fps knowing that barrel life will be modest, even poor, and accept that, but there are others who don't appreciate this - they love the performance, boast about their MVs, then switch mode to moaning loudly to anyone who'll listen when the barrel is suddenly shot out! But as I also said in the post, I also know of people today obtaining the last potentially available bit of MV from heavy bullets and lower energy single-based powders in Lapua 'Palma' small-primer brass in 308 F/TR, and finding that last 50 or 100 fps is very expensive in barrel life simply because of the pressures they're running at allied to the bullet weights. So, I don't say to people they shouldn't use N550, but warn them to keep pressures sensible. We really have little excuse these days with very accurate, reliable chronographs.
N540 might have been a different matter for you though especially with a bit higher MV. In the early days of F/TR many of us in the UK worked up 155gn Scenar loads with this powder. I was running them at 3,075 fps (30-inch barrel) and the barrel was 'gone' in under 1,500 rounds. (To be fair, nobody knew about MVs and pressures rising after a couple of hundred rounds down the barrel in those days, so the final MV may have been higher.) Two friends with identical Bartleins to mine (we bought them as a single transaction) ran 'hotter' and got 1,000-1,100 rounds. Remember we pairs-shoot in the UK so no red hot barrels from fast 'string shooting' either, and some matches we shot were in damn cold conditions too. Although Viht gives N540 the same nominal specific energy rating as most other N500s, I still have a prejudice that it is a very hot propellant based on those early F/TR days, which may well be unfair to it.