Take a really good look at the two failures shown in this thread, objectively. You have one example that is known to be caused by a material flaw, while the other is unknown. Try and see what the two really have in common?
The first shown, has detonated into bits, sheared bolt lugs, has an intact barrel, and brass embedded throughout critical parts. These are all signs of a critical overpressure.
The second shown, has a barrel in bits, an action split in half, and is showing us a ruptured case ahead of its base. As the failure here is of a known cause, which is a flawed material used only in the manufacture of the barrel, not the action, we now know what that type of failure can look like.
Yet, somehow, given all of the information provided, you want to extrapolate that it is a flawed material in the action, that has caused the first failure? Sako didn't have issues with action material, only barrel material, and in a previous line of rifles, that stopped production in 2006.
Would there have to be more documented failures? Given the number of actions produced, yes. There are thousands and thousands of them. If there were material flaws, then they would most certainly be exposed, as they were previously. Material is always sourced in batches for mass production. There is no assumption here, only fact.
While you feel, or really want this to be a failure due to material, the chances are very very low that this is the case, given the numbers made, how the material is sourced, and the pictures and information provided.
We all want to know the cause, but are not likely to be told.
It is very difficult to detonate a rifle, period. The case shown, clearly did not cause the damage shown. The lack of information being provided on the other thread certainly isn't helping, as it is secondhand, and not exactly accurate. The vast majority of action failures are indeed caused by an operator error. Cleaning rods left in barrels, a laser sighting device left in the barrel, the wrong ammunition used, the wrong powder, and wrong bullet size, are all some of the more popular, and documented failure causes. In each one of these, the action looked far more like the first shown, and far less like the one shown caused by barrel material flaw.
R.