Sitka deer, we think alike for neutral bedding, except for your view of my method as "complicated". I think the business of hanging a weight on a barrel is far more complicated. When you do that it's just a guess what the result is going to be, you have to shoot it to find out, and you might have to add MORE weight, bed again, and stress things further. And you still have to shoot it more to find out!
For your own rifles there isn't even any need to pretty up the bedding after you've done some accuracy testing with stacked business cards in there. You can just bed on your stack of cards, leave them there and bed around them.
This method wasn't mine. For many years I went to the range 4 to 5 times a week. A gunsmith/rifle builder friend who guaranteed his customs to shoot 1 minute, talked me into shooting and developing loads for them. He too had found a neutral bedding to be the best and I started doing his method with my own guns, particularly the thin contours. The heavier contours the builder always started full floated and if they shot, they were left that way. For the thinner contours It was he who took me though the progression which I adopted for my own guns. I avoid pressure point if possible but that was NOT the question the OP asked!
I agree, we are not far apart, but after decades of "wasting" powder, primers, and bullets I realized there was never a repeatable moment with pressure-bedded rifles. Since I gave up on the notion the saved components would have built a water system for a large African village.
Damn glad I put holes in paper instead!