For those that have gone down the rabbit hole of UL, LW or Sheep rifle builds, what barrel profiles have you used?
I'm guessing somewhere in the #2-#3 range? Caliber and length dependant of course.
I went with a slightly different approach.
Bill Leeper has done all my gun work for the last 30+ years, so I don't know how other gunsmiths would approach this. For the big game rifles I've had Bill rebarrel or build, I've asked him to rebarrel with the skinniest barrel he decided was possible and at the same time would deliver hunting accuracy - not target accuracy. Hunting up here on the Continental Divide, there's a whole lot of carrying versus how much actual shooting.
A 30/06 Husqvarna featherweight Husky came back as a 30 Newton with a slightly slimmer barrel than the original (20.5" barrel) and an additional 4" of barrel length. Bill pointed out it was easy to cut if down to an equal 20.5" length - but pretty hard to put the cut off pieces back. So he would cut it back in whatever increments I wanted if the extra weight/length was more than I wanted.
After carrying and shooting it at the 24" length, beside another Husky still in factory configuration in .308 Winchester to shoot beside it for comparison for weight/length, the 30 Newton barrel remains untouched as Bill first built it. I haven't bothered weighing the 30 Newton against the .308 Winchester to see what the weight difference is (they wear identical scopes and Con-Trol bases and rings as well as identical factory stocks), but I doubt it is very much. The longer 4" of barrel makes it nicer in the hands for deliberate shooting, and any reduction in how handy it is compared to the 20" length for things like snap shooting doesn't seem to change much.
Another rebarrel was a Husqvarna Mannlicher style 30/06 to 358 Whelan. Again, specified making the barrel as slim as possible. There's obviously a bit of difference in the final contour Bill turned the Ron Smith blank down to, versus the original 30/06 barrel, but again the difference in weight to me, trying to figure out which one was heavier while holding each of them in my hands, hasn't motivated me to weigh them to figure out the difference.
I don't know if Bill turned the barrels he's done for me on rebarrels/builds to a specific contour he chose, or even if he turned them down as much as was safe to minimize weight. I told him I wanted my big game mountain rifles as light as possible - but to also apply his own knowledge and experience while doing so. Bill is also a sheep hunter, not to mention a pretty damned good silhouette, benchrest, and fullbore rifle competitor. That to me was valuable take advantage of while giving him a rifle to do a barrel for with my request that it should be as light as possible.
Just a different way of looking at how you specify and get your job done, that's all. BTW, the worst grouping I've gotten out of rebarrel/builds done by Bill after being given those specifications is a BLR rebarreled from .308 Win to .358 Winchester. It groups 180 grainers pushed pretty hard into just under 1.5 MOA for 5 rounds. In comparison, the 30 Newton in the factory stock is breathing close to 3/4 MOA for five rounds and a 358 Norma Magnum, again in the original featherweight skinny factory stock, keeps 5 rounds just inside 1 MOA.
That works for me as far as hunting rifles you carry up and down mountains all day goes.