To answer the
"Why is reloaded ammo always getting blamed for Kablooeys??" questions, I merely need to point to all of the totally clueless reloading n00bs we get in here, and if you figure the percentage of F*&KED UP ammo that that noobs make up during their 1st go at reloading and then come in here to ask what's wrong after AFTERWARDS (like 10% of all n00bs), versus a factory eff up, which has to be 5 or 6 sigma mistake (literally 1 in 1,000,000) for the ammo company to be able to retain any insurance at all, and it's painfully and embarrassingly obvious that the real stink is coming out of our OWN nest and not the ammo companies. That's part of why I'm the Official Reloading Troll. I take it personally if some yahoo is trying to make me as a reloader look like a complete idiot and incompetent, and I will gladly ruin his day by calling him out for his laziness, ignorance, stupidity, being uglier than Tootsie and a bigger fathead than John-Boy's pet hippopotamus.
So while I might get honked off over this too, it's simply a total waste of time and emotion, and you might as well expect to stop a train by spitting on the railroad tracks.
Oh, and ANOTHER n00b kablooey story, from OGC while I was Lead RSO. To keep the story short, I'm just relating incidents as they happened in time, and not as I found out about them. Club member, and a reloading n00b, shows up on Sunday with a SWEET .223 that he was going to use in 3-gun (cost: $2,000+!) with some new loads he had made up. First round jams in the throat and barrel won't close, so he uses the brass rod to knock out the bullet, and goes home with the statement that he will be back Monday (the next day). I'm Lead RSO Monday, and get a phone message from Al Leirness if I know anything about the kablooey on the comp range that just happened.

So I go trucking over there expecting blood and pieces, and the range is SPOTLESS. WTF?? Found the actual witness to the event, and a member came in with a new .223, and fired about 7 or 8 shots, and there was a detonation, and the whole right side of the receiver ahead of the ejection port went bye-bye!

Witness aid the guy was pretty shaken up. Talked to Pinnacle about it later, and he assured me that a too-long round that keeps the bolt from rotating shut will result in a CATASTROPHIC destruction of the gun. Walked the range where it happened, and there is NOTHING left. No brass (intact or fragments), no pretty blue receiver pieces, no blood spots, no nothing!! The range was dead nuts SPOTLESS, like it had never been used. Gee!! What are the chances that you would have new high end .223 blow up in your hand, and you would still have the presence of mind to clean up the range, with your right hand throbbing in pain?? Obviously, this guy had screwed up royally on two consecutive days, destroyed a brand new custom gun, and didn't want anybody in the club to fined out about what am idiot and train wreck he was. That's why the old geezer in original the story GTFO first, and then went to the ER afterwards when nobody was following him.