There's been some concern expressed in the post "What Constitutes a Good Bolt-Action Rifle" about the deterioration in rifle quality as evidenced by, among other things, widespread use of button rifling. I'm not a gunsmith or metallurgist, but I thought button rifling was an improvement over hammer-forging. Correct me if I'm wrong, but in button rifling isn't a "button" with a reverse impression of the rifling, pulled through the barrel in one pass. This requires a great deal of force and the grooves are "pressed" into the metal. No metal is removed, it's merely squeezed out of the way. I thought hammer forging was similar, but instead of doing it in one stroke, a hammer drives the rifling die through the barrel with repeated blows.
I would presume both are inferior to cut rifling, in which the grooves are cut and metal is actually removed. Lots of companies offer cryogenic treatment for barrels to "remove internal stresses" in the metal. Again, correct me if I'm wrong, but I understood those stresses are the result of metal displacement during the rifling process, and that cutting the rifling doesn't create stresses in the metal.
What aftermarket barrel manufacturers sell cut-rifled barrels? I think H-S precision barrels are cut.