Above are some photos of an Iver-Johnson M1 Carbine that self-destructed while my wife was shooting it. As kB!s go it was pretty mild. However I think there should be some kind of warning out there about these old carbines. Every one of them I've picked up will fire with a partially open bolt. This is not a problem until they get dirty or use bad ammo. On this day we were using brand new Federal American Eagle FMJ rounds. The bolt failed to close all the way and, well, kB!.
We had been having a nice family outing at the range. A friend, the actual owner of the carbine, brought along a few guns for my wife to try out to find something with which she could plink.
We had fired about 75 rounds from the carbine prior to my wife trying it. On her third round the gun emitted a small blast from the breech and blew a chunk of the stock off the right side. My wife and I got our faces full of assorted crap flying out of the gun, and received a few minor burns. Luckily no one was seriously hurt.
The bolt was blown apart and the stock split along the operating rod. I recovered as many parts as I could locate and packed up for the day.
I do not know the DOB of the Iver-Johnson other than it's a "50th Anniversary (1941-1991)" reproduction, so I'm going to guess it's probably very late '80s, early '90s.
The ammunition was American Eagle. No surprise there I'm sure. The rifle, remaining ammunition, and spent casings were sent to Federal for testing. Federal came to the conclusion that the failure was due to a malfunction of the Iver-Johnson2. The rifle did not close properly prior to the ignition of the cartridge. The casing showed no signs of an overpressure load.
After receiving the carbine back I was able to repair part of the damage with a new bolt, but I had trouble finding a replacement stock.
Even with the new bolt the carbine would still fire prior to full lockup. I've seen more than one M1 Carbine lately that will do that.
Iver-Johnson's demise prior to this incident left me with no ability to obtain comment from them.
The pictures are from two days after the event and show the damage to the gun from various angles. The owner took them prior to sending the carbine to Federal as a "CYA" measure.
The other photo shows the case that failed, a fired case from the same box, and an unfired cartridge, also from the same box.