well il let you know when these FACTS are revealed to me from god, as they appear to have been to you.
Ridiculous response, hardly warrants a rebuttal. However, in the interest of educating those who are honestly seeking answers... Obviously I didn't get these facts in a vision from God. They are cold hard facts that you can bet on.
Steel cases are more prone to stick in a chamber than brass. There are several reasons that premium ammo doesn't use steel casings. If it were just as good as brass then brass would rarely be used, if ever.
What's the point in using a more expensive material that isn't any better? Maybe we should make cases out of silver, gold, or platinum??
well if its a primer or a powder problem then the ammo didnt go BOOM or create enough force, then yes it would be the ammos problem. QC can also be the ammo's problem. being made of steel is not the ammos problem.
again as i said, if its not designed to run steel, then it probibly wont run steel well. its like saying your car is not designed to run on diesel. then you pour diesel in it, and blame the fuel.
Design, Design, Design.
Not true. The round maybe didn't go off in the case of a hard primer, but not so in the case of a blown primer. This an entirely different problem I have with Wolf outside of the case being steel.
Also...
If a firearm KB's, it had has a little too much force... Would you blame that on the weapon as well?
I don't think design of the AR15 has anything really to do with it. As I said previously, my AR15's (and most people's high quality AR15's) run steel cased ammo just fine. And they run Wolf as good as any other firearms I have as well (including AK's, SKS's, etc...).
Let's go over the facts again:
1. Steel is inherently less reliable mostly because it doesn't contract like brass does after the round goes off. This creates extra friction between the chamber and the case.
2. 5.56 has very little taper on the case, also creating more friction in the chamber than in some other calibers (in contrast, 7.62x39 has an extreme taper) during feeding and extracting.
3. Wolf is marginally decent ammo. They don't have as good of QC as many other manufacturers. There's a reason you can get it for much cheaper than you can from higher quality manufacturers. It is even cheaper than most other steel cased offerings.
It works fine in my guns most of the time. I cannot think of one failure with Wolf that could be attributed to the firearm I was shooting it in. Never had a case get stuck in my AR15 chamber either, in any flavor of ammo. When I have seen cases get stuck in chambers (not in my guns, but in others' guns), the majority of the time it was steel case ammo, and not just with Wolf. It's just that Wolf has steel cases AND bad primers in my experience.
BTW, you still never answered my last question.