First of all, if anyone thinks that all short range benchrest shooters shoot flat base bullets, he is badly mistaken, and they are not by any means all rich, and retired, with lots of time to practice. Secondly, a long time ago, the first thing that I wrote that got published, (in Precision Shooting) was a letter in which I asked why some barrels don't seem to "like" BT bullets. Answers tended to be that due to the lower standards to which factory barrels are made, some have tight and loose spots that do not pair well with BTs. Personally, I got started shooting centerfire and reloading (Lee Loader)with a 788 Remington in .308 that liked nothing better than 168, and 190 grain SMKs. I think that in the case of factory barrels and chambers it is a matter of their individual "preference". As to BTs not shooting at shorter ranges, I have not found that to be the case, even with long bullets that require a fast twist. I have helped a friend work up loads for custom sporter weight rifles chambered in 7mmWSM and .338 Lapua. We did the load development at 100 yards with long high BC bullets. The groups were excellent. Of course even with muzzle brakes, shooter concentration becomes a big issue, given the recoil. My friend was up to the task, and took all of his non dangerous game kills were one shot. Also, almost all of the shooting that I did with that .308 was at 100 yards.