That is a normal ST barrel. It should have what appear as 5 "flats" and 5 "corners. The crowning tends to accentuate the appearance.
When shooting be very disciplined with your "follow-through", holding the sight on target as best you possibly can as, during and after the shot has been made.
When the .25 started to become more popular back ten years ago, shooters claimed the caliber was less accurate than the .22. After I became the first to shoot sub inch 100 yd groups with a .25 and showed those , suddenly the .25 "seemed" to be OK and as accurate.
Shooters just settled down to give the same attention they would to a springer and the rest followed.
Now I see similar with the .30 and .357. Very few sub inch 100 yd groups have been shown yet. The rifles need to be treated with all the care given to a springer,especially trigger control and follow-through. Another age old habit is the famous "cheek weld" putting side pressure to the stock where it is not wanted. Eliminating a cheek weld will often reduce the number of lateral fliers in a group.
As for your spiral problem: anything that shaves or marks the lead on one side will cause it. I can deliberately produce predictable fliers by marking the heads and to some extent the skirts. Then by indexing the loading orientations can nominate the direction the flier will impact; even make them group very acceptably to 70 yards by synchronizing the spirals so that the pellets arrive at the same spiral "clock" position. So, your thoughts on the possible thimble to steel anomaly seem a good place to attend. However I would be VERY VERY careful about doing anything other than normal cleaning of the barrel every 50 to 100 shots.
If you clean the barrel (dirty barrels cause spirals - a LOT of felt cleaning pellets went through the best barrels DURING 25 shot cards at the recent World Benchrest Championships, and thorough cleaning between cards) then look through it at a light area, you will see concentric circles all the way down the barrel. These are reflections. The circles are true and concentric because every barrel is inspected by Fredrik for straightness at the factory. If the reflected circles are not right, the barrel is re-straightened and or rejected.
So take great care when you are polishing that ST barrel ... JMA ... Best regards, Harry.
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