The military specs on 30 cal bores have a 0.003" diameter span, from .2985-.3015", and the groove diameters are .3065-.3095". You could say it is nominal diameter ±0.0015". The SAAMI standard is .300-.302 bore, and .308-.310" groove. Custom barrels are very precise, so you can order anything their tooling can do.
.308 Palma match barrels are made with .3065" grooves. The thinking is that staying supersonic all the way to the target matters, so they want maximum pressure for velocity, but don't want too fast a spin for the short 155 grain bullets, so they go to a slower twist than standard (13-14 turns per inch are common) but a narrower bore and groove diameter.
BigBear,
I hear what you are saying, but the dimensions don't add up very well. The .44 Special is a .44 Russian with lengthened case. The .44 Russian started out as a special order for the Russian army. At the time, S&W produced revolvers in .44 S&W American, which used a heeled bullet, and the Russian general interested in procuring revolvers for that army apparently liked the S&W product, but objected to the heeled bullet as a dirt and debris collector (anyone who's dropped a .22 rimfire round in the dirt knows exactly what he was talking about). So S&W came up with the 44 Russian cartridge to eliminate the heeled bullet for him. The .44 S&W American had a case diameter just ahead of the rim of .440" and it reduced slightly to .438" over the heel of the bullet. The bullet bearing surface was 0.436" diameter. But if you started with the .44 S&W American case and fit it to the common .430" lead bullet, you would have a neck wall only 0.004" thick, which is awfully thin and is less than the minus 0.006" thickness tolerance usually allow for a cartridge diameter. So that number assumes a maximum diameter case. I don't know the diameter of the heel on the .44 S&W American's bullet, but it would likely have been narrow enough that the brass would be thicker than 0.004". If the brass were 0.012", for example, as is common in revolver brass today, the heel would be 0.412" and a bullet that merely reduced to the diameter of the heel would have to be that small, and not .429-430".
The current SAAMI standard for the .44 Special calls for the case of the loaded cartridge to be 0.4505"-0.4565" diameter at the mouth, which is what suggested to me adaptation of a .45. But that's in modern terms. The second half of the 19th century saw some cartridge caliber designations move from bore diameter to groove diameter, probably for marketing reasons, and the old .44's were often .45's in current terminology. They also often cut rifling deeper in those days for the pure lead bullets they often used. IIRC, the Colt Walker .44 had a .440 land diameter (bore diameter) and a .456" groove diameter, and wanted a .457" ball for a snug fit. I may be off a couple thousandths here and there, but the point is that it was a .45 in modern terminology.
Anyway, the .44 Russian, whose brass was later lengthened to create the .44 S&W Special, seems to me to have started with a case diameter that was suited to a heeled bullet of what we would today call a .45 caliber. Possibly drills and chamber reamers for the .46 Rimfire were adapted by narrowing the throat. The .46 Rimfire was a cartridge designed for Remington 1858 revolver cartridge conversions. It had a 0.456" heeled bullet and a case maximum dimension of 0.458", so it comes close to the .44 Russian case.
But I don't actually know what the S&W engineers were thinking at the time. I don't know if a record of their reasoning even exists. It would be interesting to know, though.