Hi, Mr. Horton,
Exactly, that case was way outside the chamber when it burst, and the rifle had shown no signs of excess headspace. The cartridge was 7.7 SMI, dimensionally identical to the .303, for their heavy machinegun, and worse, had been sitting in the hot sun. I have no idea what the pressure was, but it must have been humongous.
There was no hangfire and the bolt was closed. In fact, the bolt head was broken and the extractor missing; the bolt had to be hammered open. (No anti-matter, either but then I might not have noticed.)
The rifle had been fired many rounds before that with
British
.303 with no problem, in fact I had fired several magazines from it, but was not shooting it at the time of the incident. Afterward, the rifle was checked and showed slightly excess headspace, but was fired with the British ammo (from a tie-down rest - the front stock was destroyed), again with no problems. That receiver sprung under pressure enough to let the cartridge back out, then sprung back. Yes, it sounds hard to believe, but it did happen, and I have been told that it is not unknown when someone loads the wrong powder or tries to make a .303 Super Magnum.
The owner decided to scrap the rifle because no one knew what damage the receiver had sustained.
Jim
P.S. That SMI ammo was sold as .303 British in a blue box containing 100 rounds. If you encounter any of it, I STRONGLY recommend not shooting it in a No.1 rifle. I eventually fired the other 99 in a P-14 and a Ross M10. Even with those strong rifles, high pressure was obvious, but without the sunshine and heat, not dangerous.
JK