Savage does not gauge their chambers like a common gunsmith would, it is a very different and precision process. A sleeve cap is screwed on the chamber end of the barrel. This cap has a step ground on he end of it half way across.I don't recall exactly how deep the step is,(it looked about .030") but it serves as a range of measurement. There are 5 gauges, called stand-off gauges, inserted into the chamber, each with their respective purpose. The first gauge is a throat gauge. The end of the gauge must be between the top of the cap and the step in the sleeve cap, essentially a go,no-go in height. The next guage is a headspace gage, same deal, it must be between the steps. The next gauge measures the diameter at the shoulder using a taper that will let it fall, again, between the steps. Same thing with the next gauge, it measures body diameter close to the case head. The last gauge measures the chamfer on the chamber mouth. Lastly, about every 5th barrel has a chamber cast to check for tears,scars and any other irregularity.
The way these gauges work on a taper, for every .001" the chamber differs in diameter, the gauge height would change about .030".
As far as wear on the reamers....the finish reamer cuts very little material. The 1st tool is a chamfer cutter, the next is a core drill, then a rougher reamer, then a finish reamer, and finally 20 strokes with a flexi-hone. Contrary to common belief, the barrels are NOT chambered in a lathe. Instead they are held stationary in the vertical position and are machined by a cnc turret drill press, while oil is pumped from the muzzle end.