Yes, some do. It makes cleaning after each shot a matter of running a patch down the barrel and you are done. It makes cleaning the gun after a shoot so fast you hardly have time to take out patches before you are putting them back away. You spend more time wiping down the stock and furniture on the gun, and oiling the outside of the barrel to remove fingerprints, than the time it takes to clean the inside of the barrel. Homer Dangler chromed the barrel of a gun, at my suggestion, back in the early to mid 1970's( Probably 1974) and made the same comment to me. I had chromed the barrels on two modern guns, and stopped by his booth to ask him if he had ever experimented with doing that to a barrel. He offered to do so, and when we talked the next year, he told me the gunbarrel did not shoot any more accurate, but it surely was much easier to clean. I doubt many people do it to BP barrels, as they don't know it can be done, or the advantages of a chromed barrel. After soldiers returnef from Vietnam, there was bubble of interested in chromed barrels, based on their experiences with the M-16, where stoppages occurred because the Gov't. did not follow the manufacturer's recommendation to chrome the chambers of the guns. Once that change, much of the problems with the M-16 disappeared.