Rolling pellets involves first indexing the pellet to some point along a line. This indexing process "fixes" the angle of the pellet with respect to the "starting" line and defines the center of the rolling radius. Said another way. When you index the pellet you are putting a cone against a line at a specific point. Once you have done that, when rolled, that cone will describe a curve around a point which is the center of that rolling radius. That curve IS NOT a function of the ratio of the head diameter to the skirt diameter. It is a function of the specific head diameter, skirt diameter, and distance between those two bearing surfaces.
There is a proof of this which has been extensively discussed here:
Geometric Proof AGG Discussion and here:
Geometric Proof AGN Discussion Regarding your specific question:
Rolling checks those three parameters, namely the head diameter, the skirt diameter, and the distance between those two bearing surfaces. As such it serves to group pellets which are similar in those three parameters together. It does not test a number of other parameters such as, but not limited to weight, skirt thickness, over all length, or damage which does not appear in one of those mentioned parameters.
There are a number of topics and empirical threads regarding the improvement (which has been measured) that supports the conclusions established in the above proofs. They can be found in the posts linked here:
Part One Part Two Part Three Part Four Part Five As with any thing you do to try to sort pellets there are advantages and disadvantages. The advantage is tighter groups. The disadvantages are not so obvious. Typically when sorting pellets you might find that you throw out as many as 20 or 25 percent of a batch of pellets as culls. These are pellets which would enlarge your groups. That makes every pellet you do actually shoot more expensive both in time and money. It does, after all, take time to roll pellets, just as any sorting method takes time. That time could be put to use learning how to better judge wind (for example). It may therefore be that your time can be better spent OR NOT. That is a personal call, a choice. Some will choose to make that choice, some will not.
As a hunter, my ethic demands I humanely dispatch my prey. If I can reduce the diameter of my groups by 20% at some distance then I am going to make that choice. Another person may not decide to sort pellets. That person may decide to simply pass up shots (as too long) that I may elect to take. Again, it is a PERSONAL choice.
Many bench rest shooters believe rolling pellets is a waste of their time BECAUSE wind is the single largest introducer of error in their groups. The rifles easily shoot half or three fourths MOA but wind OFTEN enlarges a match winning group to easily three times that. Clearly it would be exceptionally difficult to PROVE rolling pellets helped a shooter to win in any specific match. Again it is a PERSONAL choice.
When I want to shoot groups that look like this:
Personal Best I roll pellets.