Can you give me a suggestion for twist rate...180 and UP?
1-12" handles everything up to the 190s i/c most VLDs but not Berger Hybrids heavier than the 168gn model. It also handles the Sierra 200gn MK. It's ideal for the 185gn Berger LRBT 'Juggernaut'. It's a good choice if you're primarily looking to use 155s, the modern Berger 168/175s while still retaining the option of using the Juggernaut and Berger / JLK 180/185/190VLDs assuming your chamber throat allows.
1-11" happily handles the 208gn Hornady plus the 210s from JLK, Berger and Sierra whether VLD or tangent ogive. It's about optimal for the 185gn Berger Hybrid and just a little slow for the 200gn Hybrid, but should be OK except in very low temperatures and high atmospheric pressure conditions.
1-10" is optimum for the 200gn and 215 gn Berger Hybrids and will stabilise the 230gn Hybrid except under very adverse conditions.
In practical terms, if you're going to specify a fairly long throat to suit 185s to 210s you might as well go for the 1-10" rate as it works well with everything including 155s and the theoretically over-fast bullet rotational speeds don't seem to have any real-life adverse effect on good quality modern match bullets. You (again theoretically) lose a little MV in spinning the bullet up that bit faster than in say in a 1-11", but it's difficult to pick that out from all the other random noise. All the barrelmakers produce this twist rate, have lots of experience in making it really well, and usually quote a short delivery time.
If you want to use the super-heavies, it's not just the rifling twist rate you need to consider - the throat has to be suitable too. So, if you want to optimise the rifle for the 210gn VLDs, and be able to handle the 215gn Hybrid, the resulting combination is pretty well limited to being fed heavy bullets. The 230gn Berger is such a long bullet, the rifle virtually needs to be set up to shoot it alone.
Some people get on really well with 200gn and up bullets, but others don't. Personally, I've rowed back to using 155s and the superb 168gn Berger Hybrid after a spell of chasing ever heavier models. If you go for a compromise chamber plus a 1-11 or 1-10" twist barrel, you can shoot the 155-175s, be optimised for the 185gn Juggernaut and the raft of modern 180-190gn high-BC bullets, and still try the 210s seated a bit on the deep side.