Remingtons can be finicky - my friend had his older 700 CDL disassembled one day and saw this dark lump of wood pressing up against the barrel. so he sanded it off

. when he went out to the range, accuracy has noticeably decreased -- he was freaking out.
i remember reading an article a long time ago about some Remington tech recommending that if this happens, to 'restore' the pressure point by clamping the action upside down, hanging a weight (i forget how much, do a google search and youll find it somewhere, i think 5-7 lbs?) from the barrel, putting some bedding material in the forend where the pressure point was, installing the stock and letting it cure. this should exert an 5-7lb forend pressure on the barrel, according to them.
i was pretty skeptical of the whole pressure point juju though, so i just de-greased his stock (the thing was saturated with gun oil) and relieved his entire barrel channel a *touch* with a dowel and sandpaper. i glass bedded the action with aluminum pillars, then sealed just the raw barrel channel with tung oil to help keep moisture out.
it shoots MOA now, better than it did even before he took out the pressure point. the stock is walnut, however, so with humidity changes the stock may warp a little and will touch the barrel somewhere.
so no, the pressure point doesnt shoot better than a properly bedded, free-floated rifle. but the old unbedded rifle did shoot noticeably better with the pressure point than without.
honestly though if you want to mess around with bedding and removing pressure points for accuracy, get a synthetic or laminate stock. many of these older hunting guns have had owners that apply the gun oil
very liberally and just degreasing the stock is a chore in itself. if you are really concerned about accuracy and willing to put the time in to bed it properly then set the walnut stock aside and start with something more stable.