I do custom guns and I seat parts to a shoulder in almost every case.
The mass produced stuff, no matter who makes it is assembled so the parts will screw together with no fitting. "Tolerance" and a high torque capability is all that is needed.
Even the big name stuff has a significant fouling/oil trap in the breech.
Like this one sold by a big and old name in international gun making.
This was the upper end of the mass produced ML market. But still sloppily assmbled.
Another not so old but still big name in firearms machine installs breech plugs, or did, so tight they would often break off if removal was attempted. This was a result of the torque applied and the high torque stretching the rebate (short cut in manufacturing) behind the threads so that it was already stressed near the breaking point in some cases. The breech pictured at least has no rebate behind the threads.
But they don't have the time or a workforce that can do the work and still sell the gun for what the usual Wally World gun buyer will pay.
Given the properties of some of the propellants used in MLs today I am constantly amazed that there have not been some corrosion related catastrophic failures of these things.
I won't have a mass produced gun in the shop.
I am rebarreling a custom built sometime back (Douglas barrel) by a well known name in MLing that had a very poor job of breeching and drum installation. Sure it worked and did not fail but that is not the point. The point is it should have been done right to begin with.
Far too many people just screw things together and let it go at that with no worry about fouling traps, fouling penetrating into the threads , gases leaking around the threads (these last two due to modern "tolerance" built into the taps and dies etc etc. Many don't even understand "fouling trap" which can result simply from tapping the hole for the drum so deep that threads are cut in the bore making a fouling trap. Relatively minor but still a fouling trap.
In some cases this is little more than an annoyance. But in other cases its a safety problem especially with the use of propellants with far more aggressive fouling than BP produces.
But fitting a breech, counterboring for shoulder seal, cutting a proper nipple seat on a percussion breech etc takes time and the purchase of tools that that are not available at the local hardware store. So many just put the parts together as they get them and figure thats how its supposed to be not realizing the parts are just that and need to be properly modified and/or fit for any given application.
Dan