So I think I might have "dead soft" brass after annealing. Up until now I have been salt bath annealing Peterson brass with no issue after every firing. I crank the salt bath to 525C (about 1000F), dip the neck and shoulder in for 5 seconds, pitch em in a bucket of water....wallah....annealed brass with consistent neck tension when seating bullets. Note that I body size using Redding die and neck size using a Lee collet die as separate processes.
Now I performed the exact same process on some Hornady once fired brass. This time when I seat bullets the tension is not good. Several of them to the point that if I let go of the arm of the press, the press will seat the bullet by itself.
Now I understand that the Peterson brass is thicker, and I guess that includes the neck thickness? I actually loaded a batch of 100 bullets this way (Hornady) figuring after putting all the time into loading the powder, I could crimp these for now and see how consistent they might actually shoot.
Has this happened to anyone else? Only difference is Hornady vs. Peterson brass. Any words of the best way to crimp? I have a Lee crimp die but have never use it. Is this brass gonna get better or should I chuck it?
I have some of the same brass that has been annealed only the hasn't been run through the dies. I am going to do some experimenting on this additional brass....like double check that my Lee neck sizer is working properly. Any other things a person can do with this brass to see if it is "proper"?
Don
Now I performed the exact same process on some Hornady once fired brass. This time when I seat bullets the tension is not good. Several of them to the point that if I let go of the arm of the press, the press will seat the bullet by itself.
Now I understand that the Peterson brass is thicker, and I guess that includes the neck thickness? I actually loaded a batch of 100 bullets this way (Hornady) figuring after putting all the time into loading the powder, I could crimp these for now and see how consistent they might actually shoot.
Has this happened to anyone else? Only difference is Hornady vs. Peterson brass. Any words of the best way to crimp? I have a Lee crimp die but have never use it. Is this brass gonna get better or should I chuck it?
I have some of the same brass that has been annealed only the hasn't been run through the dies. I am going to do some experimenting on this additional brass....like double check that my Lee neck sizer is working properly. Any other things a person can do with this brass to see if it is "proper"?
Don