I've had bad luck with Wolf in both of my AR-15's.
After about one magazine, it starts short-cycling until a case seizes in the chamber, and the extractor rips the rim off.
On top of that, its underpowered.
Don't use it.
One is a full-length Armalite A2 with standard rifle buffer (chamber appears to be chrome - cannot say for sure about the bore).
Other is a Chrome-lined J&T-sourced 10.5 SBR with H2 buffer (rips rims with, and without, the Gemtech HALO suppressor).
After about one magazine, each rifle starts short-cycling until a case seizes in the chamber, and the extractor rips the rim off.
Neither of my guns are problematic with quality BRASS-CASED ammunition.
_______________________
Seriously, you can try some of that stuff in your rifle if you want.
I recommend that you load three mags each with 20 rounds.
Fire the first mag quickly without pausing.
If the gun has not choked by the end of the first mag, quickly insert the second mag.
Quickly fire 10 rounds from the second mag.
Cease fire.
Wait one minute try to fire the next shot (shot #11 second mag).
If the gun has not choked yet, fire four more shots.
Cease fire.
Wait one minute, and fire the remaining rounds in the mag.
Quickly insert the final mag, and fire all 20 rounds in rapid succession.
If the gun has not choked by the end of the third mag, you may conclude that your rifle *probably* tolerates steel-case ammo.
Otherwise, remember to bring a stiff cleaning rod to the range to bang the stuck cases from the chamber, and remember the stuck cases will be HOT.
The cleaning rod will also become extremely hot after two insertions in a hot bore.
Somebody will be along shortly to remind us that steel-case .223 works fine in AR's so long as you ram a steel-wire brush in the chamber to clean out whatever residue it is that steel-case ammo leaves behind, that brass-case ammo does not leave behind.
Then somebody will remind us that steel-case .223 ammo is fine in AR's unless you make the "mistake" of shooting brass-case ammo in the gun after you shoot the steel-case ammo - as you will discover that if you thought the stuck steel-case ammo was hell, the stuck brass-case ammo is worse by orders of magnitude.
This is what steel-case ammo (lacquer AND poly) do in the two AR’s from my collection.
_________________________________