The tiny bit of weight difference listed is going to make VERY little difference down range.
Correct.
Years ago, before ballistic calculators were available, I shot a lot of 800-1000 yards competitions with .308 155 grain and 180-190 grain Sierra MatchKings and Lapua 185 grain bullets out of .308 Win. and .30-.338 Win. Mag rifles. I used to spend a few long winter evenings weighing all the bullets for a season (4500-5000 of them) and segregating them by weight. I did the same thing with my 600 yard 168s for service rifle competition.
Out of curiosity I ran the data for the drop and 10 MPH windage for a 0.3 grain weight change for a 180 grain Sierra MatchKing at 2600 FPS and the change in both is under 0.1" at 1000 yards. In fact as I increased the weight to 3 full grains it finally changed the windage by 0.1" but the elevation drop remained the same.
I figure that the single biggest factor in effecting long range range accuracy of ammo is how consistent you can keep the velocity. Even very consistent ammo will regularly exhibit a 20 FPS or higher velocity spread so I kept the weight the same and changed the velocity by 20 FPS.
180 grain Sierra MatchKing @ 2600 FPS elevation drop is -457.1", windage is 110.5".
180 grain Sierra MatchKing @ 2580 FPS elevation drop is -465.0", windage is 111.7".
Clearly the velocity spread of even good ammo has far more effect than 'standard" bullet weight differences.
With the availability of ballistic calculators I have found that worrying about the point of impact differences in weight groupings of good target bullets is kind of like pole vaulting over mouse turds. You can do it if you want but it won't work better.
Drop dead consistency in case prep, neck tension and the weighing of powder would seem to be far more useful places to spend your energies.
BTW, I suspect the that the "industry standard" is what each manufacturer thinks customers expect from a given line and style of bullet. Match and other fussy shooters expect better consistency than plinkers and are willing to pay for it. So, I guess the standard is "good enough to get a repeat sale"
Lance