I will be making some 6mm Remington brass by resizing Norma 257 Roberts +P brass. When, during the process of resizing through fireforming should I anneal the cases.
I will be making some 6mm Remington brass by resizing Norma 257 Roberts +P brass
When I am sizing down for 20 Practical, if, if, the brass is new, I don't anneal before sizing down. It was already annealed during manufacturing. But if the brass has been fired, I will anneal before sizing down. I also take the neck down in steps, not a single step. For my 0.020" reduction, I make 3 steps in neck reduction.
I tested forming 6mm Rem from 7x57mm with a 257 Roberts FL die followed by a 6mm Rem FL die. You can expect neck walls to thicken by about .002" with a donut at the base of the neck. FWIW Ken Howell stipulated using "form, trim, and ream dies" when starting from 257 Roberts (not 7x57mm).
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That's why I prefaced the Ken Howell aside with "FWIW". And I had just previously stated that I personally formed 6mm Rem successfully from 7x57 using only 257 Roberts and 6mm Rem FL dies. Preaching to the choir?Howell might have advocated that in print. In the real world if you do not have those dies you just skip them and form with the best alternative dies that you can come up with or afford.
New Remington factory 6mm brass has a natural taper to the neck wall thickness. There is several thousandths taper per side which can be enough to defeat the use of a Lee collet neck die. If you are fussy about necks and dough nuts and such even Remington factory brass will not make you happy without turning it.
I disagree. A proper tight-fitting ream die and a quality reamer are better for creating OD/ID concentricity (and removing a donut) than outside neck turning. But as you point out it is very expensive and a ream die may not even exist for a particular cartridge.Most folks will avoid reaming since it does not ensure concentricity of the neck ID to the neck OD.