I agree with Joe 100%, and I know that it may seem like I am drifting away from the topic, but what I am about to say is very pertinent when it comes to all matters concerning precision accuracy. What I will ad is this; if you have a truly great combination of everything else except for one thing, you may never know the true potential of just how good everything else really may be. In other words: if you have the proper barrel length, number of groves, grove depth, rate of spin, bore diameter in relation to lands diameter, chamber cut and everything else is dead on, plus the lot number of your bullets is perfect for your gun, if for some reason some minor little thing is off, like the torque on the action screws is too loose or tight, or the barrel is vibrating at an inconsistant rate while the bullet exits the muzzle, you may never actually realize just how good a combination you really do have.
Oh, you may be able to put together some awesome scores under certain conditions, but everything will soon fall apart under those not-so-certain of conditions.
As Joe said: in the perfect scenario you want your bullet to "go to sleep" just as soon as possible after it leaves the barrel, and if possible, immediately upon its exit from the bore.
There's no sure cure for how much of which or what will be the ultimate answer to achieving your goal of precision accuracy. You will just have to shoot and shoot ...and practice, practice, practice to find out the answers. And when at practice, don't just pull up to the bench and blast away. Analyze everything; how the rest sits on the bench, how the target hangs on its backer, how your windflags are placed to give you the proper readings for the conditions, are you comfortable while sitting at the bench over long periods of time, how smoothly does your gun ride the bags, how much pressure, or lack there of, you are placing the butt pad ....shot after shot. Everything, because nothing is irrelevant when it comes to benchrest shooting! It is only after a perfect balance has been achieved that you will start to reap the rewards of seeing perfection on the target time after time after time.
And yes, this does have something to do with to how well a gun will shoot the wind!