Most "good" AR upper/lower receivers are forgings made from 7075 AL. -Good chit. Harder and stronger than other grades and very dense. That being said it's still aluminium. "Good" upper and lowers are also Type III anodized.
What you have is a hard boiled egg. That few .001's of 'ano' is what saves your bacon because it's hard as woodpecker lips. Lapping with an AO or silicon carbide abrasive is going to remove this. What your left with is the egg minus the shell.
AR's often don't respond well to this. This topic makes me think back to the summer of 1990 when I was a recruit at MCRD. M-16A2's with lord knows how many rounds, cleaning rods, Q Tips, etc run through them. The Upper Receiver bores were still in amazing shape considering... Never forget: A recruit or Lance Corporal can feck up a bowling ball, lol. Yet the guns seem to tolerate it.
At one time I did a great deal of AR work for the USMC Reserve Shooting Team. Col Hoham and CWO Karcher were the HMFIC's. Those guns ran great at Perry, Karcher taking a National Championship in 2002. -Not a single lapping or "truing" tool used on any of em.
Just a thought.