ken158
Silver $$ Contributor
Lots of good info here but I do several things in different order. I shoot a lot of varmint rounds and a few big game rounds. Fired brass gets the universal de-primer die treatment. Then the brass goes to the pin cleaner where the solution gets all clean including the primer pockets. I shoot some wildcats so they are always annealed after the new case is formed. Annealing prior to sizing defeats the purpose. You want the heat to relieve the stress of sizing. Annealing before sizing is a waste of time. I use an anneal eze machine and have the turning rate at 5 seconds. Some feel like they have to quench in water but that really does nothing but make a mess. I will then anneal about every third or fourth firing. I then size, chamfer and debur necks, prime, powder and seat. If I don't use the pin cleaner, I tumble all fired brass in media. I would never put a dirty case in one of my dies. There is too much of a chance something would scratch the die surface by running dirty brass in and out thereby increasing contaminants into the die.











