Yes, and it’s a journey, not a destination.Maybe there is, maybe there isn’t. It’s all part of the fun.
Yes, and it’s a journey, not a destination.Maybe there is, maybe there isn’t. It’s all part of the fun.
AMP is in the process of manufacturing/Designing something for measuring seating force accurately and logging it on Arbour Presses. No idea if it is something they intend to sell though.I think 5 times. Going forward, I’ll prep 200 cases and not anneal them. After 5 firings the barrel will be about done anyway (LR BR) so I’ll start over with a new barrel and brass.
If I really wanted to answer the question on annealing I’d take 10 cases and anneal then every time and then take 10 cases and not anneal them. I’d shoot each batch 10 times and record seating pressure, velocity group size. Ideally I’d hardness test as well.
Find what time it takes for the case to start turning red in a dark room and cut back 10%.
AMP is in the process of manufacturing/Designing something for measuring seating force accurately and logging it on Arbour Presses. No idea if it is something they intend to sell though.
Just out of interest, when they manufacture a brass cartridge is the body of the case deliberately hardened to cope with the pressure of firing or is it just incidental and then the necks are softened by annealing for marketing / reloading reasons. Q. Can correctly annealed brass cartridge sustain firing in a chamber or is the brass to soft.
Just out of interest, when they manufacture a brass cartridge is the body of the case deliberately hardened to cope with the pressure of firing or is it just incidental and then the necks are softened by annealing for marketing / reloading reasons. Q. Can correctly annealed brass cartridge sustain firing in a chamber or is the brass to soft.
Their annealer already sets the brass back to the same hardness each time.I already have a hydro seater to accurately measure seating force. I would like to see AMP come up with a way to truly put the case back to the same hardness level each time it is annealed.
Correcto.When you do this you will notice that the first part that begins to glow is the very edge of the case mouth. Very shortly afterwards the glow shoots down the neck towards the shoulder. If you use 750F Tempilaq and dial in a time long enough for it to change colour one shoulder length below the shoulder/body junction you can be very well assured the neck region has gotten a LOT hotter. And so the question is just how far down the case body do you want your 750F indicator to change colour.
When you do this you will notice that the first part that begins to glow is the very edge of the case mouth. Very shortly afterwards the glow shoots down the neck towards the shoulder. If you use 750F Tempilaq and dial in a time long enough for it to change colour one shoulder length below the shoulder/body junction you can be very well assured the neck region has gotten a LOT hotter. And so the question is just how far down the case body do you want your 750F indicator to change colour.
In the back of my mind, I guess I always knew that precision shooting largely boiled down to choosing the type of pain you prefer.![]()
This is interesting, and shows just how hard it is to measure inputs when annealing. Based on this description, they're is using an indirect way to calculate heat transfer (current and time) rather than measure temperature and time, as I'm sure they would if they could. It's clever, and impressive to the extent that it works (I don't own one, so I can't say, but I don't have any reason to doubt them).Yeah, Aztec mode watches for the exact moment the brass melts. Coincidentally, I have melted pieces of .223 rem brass just playing around with my GinaErick Annealer and the current drops right as the brass melts. I'm quite certain that current drop is the same thing that Aztek mode is programmed to watch while analyzing the brass. Aztek then takes the timing and then backs off using some formula they have developed.
This is interesting, and shows just how hard it is to measure inputs when annealing. Based on this description, they're is using an indirect way to calculate heat transfer (current and time) rather than measure temperature and time, as I'm sure they would if they could. It's clever, and impressive to the extent that it works (I don't own one, so I can't say, but I don't have any reason to doubt them).
Just out of interest, when they manufacture a brass cartridge is the body of the case deliberately hardened to cope with the pressure of firing or is it just incidental and then the necks are softened by annealing for marketing / reloading reasons. Q. Can correctly annealed brass cartridge sustain firing in a chamber or is the brass to soft.
To be precise, they’re not really calculating heat transfer. Induction heating doesn’t transfer heat. The heat comes from the alternating currents induced in the object. What varies is the “reluctance” of the object and this value is dependent on composition and form of the object a current is to be induced. This is why case wall thickness and it’s distribution requires different programs between cases of the same caliber but different makes.
Hi SGK I found exactly the same thing. However I went on from this point experimenting as I had some 308 brass that had heads that had expanded to much. The changes I made were the seating depth in the coil. I always was under the assumption that the part I wanted to heat should be near the middle of the coil or just slightly higher.
I started inserting the case further and further I was concerned that I may heat the body of the case too much. I ended up with the top of the neck level with the to of the coil or slightly over. I hac concerns that this may be heating the case too much, keeping a close eye on it and using Temilaq this didnt happen. The annealing time went up slightly but the overheating of the neck also didnt happen as pronounced and I go a good annealing temperature in the shoulder area as well as the neck.
If you have some spare brass its worth an hour or two playing around. I also took some cases to melting point keeping an eye on the current draw to see if i could draw any conclusions from that, like the Aztec mode of the AMP.