I shoot lots of lead , just the way they where made.
A common modification with revolvers when shooting lead. “Better accuracy”, less fouling, and less "splash” on the cylinder face. Not necessary but can help.Is any of that work necessary? I feel like lots of people shoot lots of lead through lots of guns without modification?
What is the work you suggest supposed to accomplish?
Just check your cylinder throats. If they won't allow a .358 lead bullet to pass through them then you should have them reamed out ot .358 to reduce leading and to maximize the guns accuracy. The 11 Degree cut on the forcing cone will eliminate a lot of lead splash and build up around the forcing cone. Nobody suggests you can't shoot lead through cylinders that are tighter than the barrel but nobody suggests it has no effect on the guns accuracy. Rugers are famous for having tight cylinders. Check yours out by pushing a .358 bullet through each one. Any gunsmith with a set of reamers can do the work for you. My Smith 686 no dash was fine. My Ruger GP-100...not so much. Fixed now....accuracy difference was noticeable. No leading and little to no lead build up at the forcing cone.
Ii
If you are only going to shoot plated bullets do the test with .357 bullets and leave the forcing cone as is.
Take Care
Bob
101% Correct/\
My GP100 does 1/2 inch groups at 15 meters with 357 magnum loads of 158 grain Speer jacketed hollow points over 14 grains 2400 powder.
Best groups it can do with .358 sized home cast (Lee tumble lube) 158 grain SWC over 4.1 grain 700X are 1.5 inches.
I believe my GP100 will benefit from reaming and 11 degreee cut.
I would agree with curseyou and suggest the cylinder chamfering is the only particularly useful thing to get done, and even then I'd only spend the money on that if I wanted to compete with it or had a real desire to use speed loaders. If it's just a range toy that you load each round individually into the cylinder I would spend the money on something else like more ammo.
Finally another with real world experience with these revolvers, i had a similar experience and found it dis make a substantial difference in MY gunRugerman and others if you shoot plated and jacketed bullets that are typically sized .357 you are not going to see issues with cylinder throats that are .357. If you shoot lead bullets you likely will see leading in your gun due to gas cutting. Too, whether your gun has cylinder throats that are .358 or even .357 are not much concern to me when mine were <.356 and <.357. Accuracy was adequate but not great with jacketed bullets and less than adequate shooting lead bullets that should be sized .358 to fully seal a bore of .357. The gun did lead up though with 100 rds shot through it. Opening up the throats to .358 made all the difference in the world as did cutting the forcing cone to 11 degrees. I now experience no leading using either .357 or 38spl loads.
I love my Rugers and use the GP-100 in IDPA Revolver Division but they do tend to be kit guns.
To the OP if you do decide to send your gun to a 'smith order a set of hammer and trigger shims they do add to the quality of the trigger pull. The Match Champion comes with them the regular GP-100 does not. Until you get a FO front sight flouresent orange paint is a very good substitute over a white base coat. I put the original sight on the gun when I carry mine in the bush. I put the FO on for competition and target shooting.
Take Care
Bob