I have read time and time again , all around the internet and on many forums. If there is a complaint of something catastrophic happening to a gun, 8 times out of 10 the ammo was Sellier and Belliot. I certainly had VERY SNAPPY RECOIL from the 9mm ammo I just finished shooting. (I am glad I only bought one box of it). I think that they load many different calibers way too hot, and if anything untowards happens while shooting, such as a bolt that is 1mm out-of-battery, the extra heat from the ammo will "tip the scale".
My experience with Sellier&Bellot has been similar, flattened primers and pierced primers in more than one firearm. Of course your results may vary but I will no longer use that brand.The ammo is very clean burning and brass seems good but maybe loaded abit hot or thin primers?
That's like saying that you don't want to shoot a .22 or a .308 because they have had catastrophic failures...
Chit happens, sometimes the fault of the shooter, sometimes the ammo, sometimes the gun, and in the odd case, all three were to blame.
Sucks about the gun for sure though.
Can never say never, but I doubt it's the ammo. I've run quite a bit of S&B carbine ammo through two of mine without issue. It is also cleaner burning than all the other brands. I've also Chronographed it alongside Federal and Winchester ammo as well. They all average around 2000fps through my 18.6" barrels. S&B carbine ammo is certainly no hotter than either Amercian brands.
I can't see from the pics if the left bolt lug is damaged or not. My guess is the solid head area of the cartridge ruptured from an out of battery ignition, and took the slide an part of the stock with it. I'm also guessing that the mag got blown out of the magwell, as it appears there is damage to the area where the mag release was.
Sellier & Bellot doesn't produce anything. They re-label.
Sellier & Bellot doesn't produce anything. They re-label.




























