Alright, I'll refine the seating to .003" increments from 2.225 back to 2.205
Then with the most promising (with emphasis on least vertical) do charge tests start at 42.5 and work up to 44.6 in .3 gr increments.
I started with the 185 Juggernaut Target #30418 having faith that Berger knows their business. It is confusing, tho, that the Juggernaut Target, Juggernaut OTM, and BT Long Range are said to be the same bullet, yet the SG value differs.
The differences between Juggernaut and the 185 OTM are essentially Lot-to-Lot variations. I've used plenty of both. Similar dimensional variance can be found between different individual Lots of either bullet, which might have a very small effect on Sg under given velocity, twist rate, and atmospheric conditions. The BT Long range is simply different terminology for the 185 Juggernaut, it's the exact same bullet.
A 12-twist is plenty for the Juggernaut. According to Berger's Twist Rate Calculator, at 59 degrees F and 0 ft elevation, pushing the Juggernauts at 2750 fps out of a 12-twist barrel will generate an Sg of 1.43, a estimated compromise of 2% of the intrinsic BC. This is their "worst-case scenario" and I suppose if you do a lot of shooting on the beach in November through January, it might be a small consideration. At 65 degrees and 1000 ft elevation, the estimated Sg goes up to 1.50, which is good for the full BC value.
For comparative purposes, I run the 200.20X bullet at ~2650 fps out of a 30" 11-twist barrel. At 65 degrees F and 1000 ft elevation, the twist rate calculator estimates an Sg of only 1.35, which translates to a 4% decrease of the intrinsic BC value - a much larger decrease than when running a Juggernaut out of a 12-twist barrel. I can assure you the 200.20Xs shoot just fine out of an 11-twist barrel.
None of this is any guarantee that the Jugs will shoot lights out from any particular rifle. It merely suggests that if they do not shoot well, the problem is likely something other than twist rate. The Jug is usually a very forgiving bullet and easy to tune, but I can easily imagine that not every single rifle is going to be a laser with them. As has been noted by others, borescope images of Savage factory barrels are generally not very flattering, even though most of the ones I've seen shot very well out of the box. I'd be far more concerned if the Jugs couldn't be easily tuned in with a quality replacement barrel, although if you're going to put a new pipe on a commercial rifle for use in F-TR, you might as well buy one with a more appropriate twist rate (i.e. 10-twist) and load up the 200.20X or 200 Hybrid bullets.
If you want to get your money's worth out of the factory barrel and the Jugs simply don't work out for one reason or another, another option would be the 168 Hybrid. There is a very nice node at ~2900 fps from a 30" barrel with H4895. In my hands, they like to be seated at ~.012" to .015" off the lands. The BC of the 168 Hybrid is very high relative to its weight and at 2900 fps, the predicted performance is close enough to that of a Juggernaut at ~2750 fps that the difference isn't work talking about. At any rate, it's another option that is compatible with a 12-twist barrel.
59 degrees, 0 ft. elevation
65 degrees, 1000 ft. elevation