Here's one I just did yesterday, using Taylor's lathe and 320 grit. When I started, it was a normal angled cutter crown as issued on almost all guns from their makers. They can be done this way with just your thumb-end and .320, finishing with something finer, or done more quickly with a latche, of course. Keep rotating the barrel as you progress. The difference in starting the ball and subsequent loading is incredible, compared to a sharper crown. This is not coning per-se, as only the very end of the barrel is shaped,radiused, smoothed and polished, not the interior in depth, like in a cone.
The first one I posted is my .69, done entirely with emery or paper and my thumb. I load a .684" pure lead ball in it with a .030" denim patch. This combination is .030" larger than the groove diameter, for .015" compression per side. It provides the load that shoots into 1 1/2MOA at 200 yards, off teh bags, of course, with the rifle's Express sights.
Here's a closeup, albeit a bit fuzzy, of the same .50 cal barrel.