Re: I think my Kriger barrel is done @ 1200 rounds "UPDATE"
I would add one thing. Unless you have a bore scope, if you take a minimalist approach to cleaning, depending on the barrel, caliber, powder used, and number of shots between cleaning, you are very likely to end up with a similar problem to what you currently are experiencing, particularly with the powder that you are using.
I have one barrel that is worn out, (and several others that are in various stages of wear) or I should say burned out. Before it was retired to fire forming duty (6PPC) it shot very well, but the throat had become alligatored to the point that it would pick up fouling too rapidly to be worth dealing with for serious match work. The last group that it shot before being retired was, I believe a .295 at 200 yards, which won the individual match (as opposed to an agg.) that it was shot in. The one thing that had been done that probably helped to prolong the life of the barrel was to recrown it when a tuner was fitted. I think that anyone that is serious about accuracy should probably have his crowns touched up every 3-400 rounds. My point is that barrels do not so much wear out, as burn out, and that I find no convincing evidence that proper use of bronze brushes shortens the accurate life of barrels. I do find considerable evidence that bad rod technique, combined with inadequately designed rod guides make it highly likely that regular use of abrasives can create undesirable asymmetrical wear in a chamber's throat.
This is not to say that I do not use abrasives. I do, infrequently, and very carefully, with a better rod guide than 99% of the shooters that I have seen (except for benchrest competitors, where the percentage would be about 50) and very careful technique.
I have read the discussions about the evils of bronze brushes, and for that matter, drawing them back through the barrel, instead to removing them at the muzzle at the end of every down barrel stroke. I am not convinced that there is anything to it. Barrels wear out if you shoot them. As one fellow so succinctly put it, that is why they are threaded.
Come to a short range centerfire benchrest match some time, a sanctioned one, with top level competitors, and look at how they clean.