The upper receiver is only a case; it doesn't dictate or affect accuracy of the barrel.
Take a look at the JP LRI-20vSemi-Monolithic Long Range Precision Rifle - they added a heck of a lot of material at the barrel junction because this "counters the weak point of standard AR design by adding an abundance of material to stabilize the barrel mount. Supporting this, we’ve also added extra material to the front pivot pin joint. Paired with our MicroFit™ Takedown Pins, the LRI-20™ offers a 100% unified chassis system that we’ve seen tighten groups on even the “problems children” of our barrel sample library."
JP is well regarded, and their rifles are widely accepted as shooters. Perhaps they are right about the idea that the upper can affect accuracy?
The bolt carrier group has, essentially, no bearing on accuracy. The bolt is the business end of the bullet fire-y bits (which for all intents and purposes is floating) locks into the barrel extension and voila - centered and repeatable - every time. The only (three) things that truly matter on the AR is the 1) barrel (complete with extension) and 2) the bolt and 3) the round being fired. The rest of it is superfluous nonsense that makes those three things work.
Some very well regarded gunsmiths would thoroughly disagree with that statement. Bolt carrier tilt is something folks will go to great lengths to address.
I highly doubt either you or I are sufficiently versed in the details of the remarkably complex physics involved in the chambering and firing of an AR to be able to authoritatively state one way or another what is nonsense.
You insist others are wrong, I'm merely pointing out there are varied opinions. You do you, I'll do me.
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