Anecdotal here, but I had a barrel that wouldn't shoot and was very hard to load. It shreaded patches. When I ran a lead ball down it I found it rather tight for roughly a foot at the muzzle end. It had tooling marks all over the lands in that section, but was much better towards the breech. Grooves were super deep.
I machined a series of long brass laps each at most 0.0003" larger than the previous one, with spaced grooves along the length. They also had a very slight taper at the muzzle end. I think I used 400 grit lapping compound. It took quite a while and was very messy work, but I smoothed it out. I did much of it with a slow speed on a drill, with a brass centering guide at the breech, and some extra lube. I spent as little time as possible with the lap protruding from the muzzle, running long strokes in the barrel. I quit using a lap as soon as it freed up. I left the barrel still having a slight choke towards the muzzle but no more tooling marks on the lands and no hard step a ways back from the muzzle. Lapping was more straight than rotary at the end of the job.
Of course this work did nothing for smoothing the grooves, unlike cast lead lapping.
It no longer shreaded patches, and loaded much easier. Still didn't shoot all that well though! Sometime I'll pull it out and make an attempt at bending the barrel, since it wants to shoot pretty high at 50 yards.
If it wasn't already in a stock I wouldn't have bothered with it.
Gerald