Tim,
The usual problem we are tying to solve with tuners is vertical shot stringing. Just for the fun of it, new shooters -- and tuning device developers -- should remember Speedy Gonzales' advice, reprinted here:
http://www.6mmbr.com/verticaltips.html
Outside of load development, almost none of the things Speedy mentions will be helped by a tuner. One reason it is so hard to come up with a *predictive model* for tuners. By predictive model, I mean "if this happens, do this, and such and such will result."
An obvious example is if you know a bullet's drag (B.C.) and muzzle velocity, you can compute how many clicks to put on the scope to move from 100 to 1,000 yards. We don't have a similar predicting model for tuners, in part, because the core phenomena, vertical stringing, can have so many causes.
To his credit, Gene Beggs gave it a try. Remember the "Winter of Density Altitude?" The discussion raged all winter on BR Central. A lot of people were sure it would work for LV-weight rifles chambered in cartridges similar to the 6 PPC. The sale of devices that would measure density altitude skyrocketed that winter. I privately wished there were thousands of bechrest shooters, so come spring, I could sell short the stock of those companies who made them.
And of course, come spring, it turned out to not be the entire story, with no Paul Harvey in sight.
Try testing your ideas on return-to-battery unlimited rifles. Even go as far as Joel and I, and build rifles where the center of mass of the whole rifle is along the centerline of the bore. The first thing that will teach you is the geometry of the rifle matters, and any tuner that comes with specific instructions -- not those simply saying "move it until you get the best groups -- had better include geometry and weight of the rifle as a part of the instructions. Also case sizing, firing pin issues, etc. etc. There are just too many variables.
I still believe that a simple, unmovable weight on the end of the barrel, coupled with what I call a snubber, and load development will take you just as far.
I'd also be curious as to how many point-blank shooters use a tuner on their rail guns.
Charles