Trying to tune a featherweight contour barrel to 1/2 MOA is an exercise in frustration. Sub MOA is about all we can count on. That is no handicap for what this trifle is designed for, and that is to be lightweight and shoot big game at short to medium ranges. If you could hold it steady, a one MOA rifle has no issue cleanly taking animals at 600 yds.
Truing a hunting rifle action gains very little if anything at all. Accuracy is primarily in the barrel, and we don't pick any lightweight contour to build a 1/2 MOA rifle. Yes, sometimes we get lucky
If you really want to find the best this rifle will shoot, then do this:
1. Weight sort the brass and eliminate any outliers
2. Make that variance in case neck wall thickness doesn't exceed .0015"
3. Uniform primer pockets and deburr flash holes
4. Measure all the bullets base to ogive and sort into groups of .001". Only shoot these sorted bullets for groups
5. Weigh all powder charges to the kernel
6. When resizing brass, measure the shoulder of each case and make sure they are all within .0005 - .001"
7. Measure each bullet after seating and make sure they are within .001"
8. Shoot from a bench with stable front and rear rests. Don't pull the trigger until the crosshairs are dead steady. Be very consistent in how your grip, hold, and fire the rifle
The reloading steps I outlined may not help a hunting rifle, but they will eliminate a bunch of potential variables. The shooting method I mentioned is the best way to see what any rifle will do.