@Davidcgoodwin01 Using "features" just because they are available is the wrong approach IMO. So for example, if you were using a large diameter nozzle and therefore printing at slowish speeds due to being limited by melt rate, then it is highly unlikely that there would be any significant pressure inside the hot end that needs to be compensated for by using pressure advance. Similarly with non-liner extrusion which is to compensate for extruder slippage - more likely to happen at faster speeds and/or with an extruder that doesn't grip filament too well. Dynamic acceleration is there to help with ringing - but depending on your kinematics, the speeds and accelerations you use, the mass of the hot end and about a dozen other factors, you might not have any ringing. You won't need mesh bed flatness compensation if your bed is inherently flat. I could go on but you get the idea.
And some of these features will interact with each other. For example non linear extrusion might exacerbate hot end pressure requiring more pressure advance.
The best approach (IMO) is to start with the minimum configuration, tune all the other settings to get the very best print quality you can, and only then enable whichever features might be necessary to deal with any issues that you can't resolve by other means.