I had a 6mm 1/15 twist barrel couple years ago. It was ordered as a 1/13.5 twist but somehow came in at 1/15. I did not check the twist. Just had it chambered and started shooting it. It was a teaser. Sometimes it would shoot sometimes it would not, even slight keyhole. I was shooting a variety of bullets, Gentners, Bruno, and a bullet made by a friend. Most were 65-66 grains. The friends bullets were 62's and seemed to shoot the best. I live in Oklahoma, altitude 1126 feet and shoot at Luther and Denton. Nothing over about 1200 feet altitude. The 62 grain bullets measure .800 in length. I would assume made on a .790 jacket. At Raton in 2009 these bullets shot as good as I have ever shot, and this thru the 1/15 twist barrel. Of course I thought it was a 1/13.5. I messed with this barrel for several months trying to get it to shoot. Sometimes it would and sometimes it would shoot 3 inch goups at 100 yards. Finally the light bulb went off. I checked the twist. That was when I found out about the 1/15 twist. Now at Raton which is 6,000 plus altitude that barrel was a hummer, but at lower altitude it was a bummer. I contacted the maker, sent it back and they replaced it free of charge. My gunsmith said I should have kept the barrel and just shot a shorter bullet. Maybe so but it is gone now. Sometimes I think maybe a 14.5 would work good as I don't shoot in real cold weather. Probably never under 45 degrees or so. I did the modified Greenhill formula on that short bullet at 3320 fps which is about where I shot it and if I remember it stated I needed a 14.9 twist. So I guess that is why it sometimes shot and sometimes not. I don't think it hurts accuracy to be a bit overstabilized but I know for sure it does if you are understabilized. That was my only experience with a 1/15 for a 6ppc.
Donald