It is not so much that the article provides "Do this, and your groups will get smaller." directions, but that it is thought provoking, and points out that the magnitude of the velocity differences between different moisture contents is significant, and probably more than anyone would have imagined.
Some time back, Jim Borden told me of preloading for a big match, in batches, over a period of time in which the humidity took some extreme swings. At the beginning of each loading session, he established what weight, would produce the desired velocity. The extreme spread of these charge weights, from batch to batch, which all produced the same velocity, was 1.5 gr. When he shot test groups with ammunition that was pulled from all the lots, it grouped well. Food fro thought....
At Visalia, during matches that take place in hot weather, there is a considerable temperature and humidity change through the day, so not only are velocities impacted by a significant increase in temperature, but there may be some contribution to velocity change from powder drying in the measure, and if, as Jim, and others contend, tune is velocity specific....I say may, because that test has yet to be run. As I said, food for thought.