Kind of getting bored and have a 40 mile one way drive to work. Too much time to think. What I have always found interesting is the amount of extra money spent on barrels, questions on which are best etc. My experiences have been that most barrels out shoot the shooter. The biggest contribution to accuracy and use for me has always been the trigger pull, given that the lock is adequate for reliability and speed, which do exist now at reasonable prices.
At first glance I have always felt that the simple single trigger makes the best hunting rifle. For a larger game rifle I still do. when I put together my 25 squirrel rifle I used a DST because I had one left over from years ago, did not have to buy one, and they are more correct for a Tennessee rifle. Considering that squirrel heads are small targets, in this case, I think maybe they make a good hunting rifle. It is a double throw trigger in which you can fire the rifle with the trigger set or unset. I have a rifle with a single throw trigger, which worked great on targets but is a real PITA in the woods and for general use. You have to set the trigger to lower the hammer.
When I target shot, a fellow shooter and builder, insisted that the single trigger was the only way to go. Those of us using set triggers won more than he did. A set trigger can be set in ounces where for safety reasons a single trigger should be at least a couple of pounds. They can be made smooth and tuned very nicely. but still do not have the letoff of a good set trigger.
For me the barrel is precision the trigger is accuracy.
DP