Mulligan
Silver $$ Contributor
Say you have brass previously sorted into smaller lots based on whatever is important to you. Now some have been fired 3 times and others as many as 11 times, if you anneal them all at the same time are they all set back to the same beginning point again or do you keep them segregated?
I see many different ways of annealing promoted as to helping with brass consistency. The drill and socket method is cheap and easy, folks rave about the "Skip design", and you have three or four other commercial designs all with many fans of their own.
Has there been a side by side comparison test to see which is best? With best being proven on paper or some other unit of measure that makes sense?
As an annealing rookie "looking in" it appears after reading hoards of posts here and on other forums that one can pick a method/design and go with it unless you turn your necks wafer thin ( in which case annealing may not be needed) the improvements on paper are going to be significant effough to satisfy most.
CW
I see many different ways of annealing promoted as to helping with brass consistency. The drill and socket method is cheap and easy, folks rave about the "Skip design", and you have three or four other commercial designs all with many fans of their own.
Has there been a side by side comparison test to see which is best? With best being proven on paper or some other unit of measure that makes sense?
As an annealing rookie "looking in" it appears after reading hoards of posts here and on other forums that one can pick a method/design and go with it unless you turn your necks wafer thin ( in which case annealing may not be needed) the improvements on paper are going to be significant effough to satisfy most.
CW
Last edited: