The guy with the two malfunctioning rifles is a fellow I used to shoot with alot, but I have been mostly shooting weekdays for the last 2 years, so have not seen him. I will ask for more info when I do, the bad hunting trip was clearly painful to him, so will have to see.
My prior exposure to chambering problems in rifles have been with the ammo as the main culprit, not the gun. But then again, I only use factory standard rifles. The info on the .32 cal. ACP insert is helpful as that makes sense that the device would expand differently with individual rifles.
One area of warning to collectors and shooters is the early unmodified military bolt action rifles. I had a Japanese Type 44 carbine (made around 1912) and an early production Chilean Mauser model 1895 that I handloaded for, and these guns were very tight in the chambering for the handloads, not a problem with the factory loads, but as soon as I used my handloads, failure to chamber was a risk. I had read that due to the muddy conditions in WW 1, many British rifles had their chambers reamed out to be more forgiving, and my later production military bolt actions were nice for handloading.