I flip mine in a pan of water . Air cooling is fine . Re loading is fun . So speed doesn't matter . LarryI use the same method Joe R does with one change, a old wet rag in the bottom of the pan. They will cool to the touch quicker.
I flip mine in a pan of water . Air cooling is fine . Re loading is fun . So speed doesn't matter . LarryI use the same method Joe R does with one change, a old wet rag in the bottom of the pan. They will cool to the touch quicker.
Arthur,
You're making things way more complicated than they really are.
If you're annealing 50 pieces or less at the time. The socket and drill method is the only thing that makes sense for you.
The machine annealers make sense for guys that shoot a couple hundreds of rounds a month or more. I've owned and used the Annealez, Benchsource, AMP, Giraud, MRB annealer (my current favorite) and Skip's home made one. They all have pros and cons, but for your volume IMO the drill is the way to go.
- Its simple.
- Its cheap.
- its reliable.
- Easy to setup and take down.
- Takes little storage space.
- All you have to do is count to 7 Mississippi.
View attachment 1014776
Joe thanks for the advice. If you would please what is the exact type and manufacture of the propane tip you are using to anneal your brass in your pictures.
Thanks,
Arthur.
View attachment 1014777
View attachment 1014778
View attachment 1014779
Good luck,
Joe
Can I ask who does this type of service?To Each, His Own --- for the small amount of brass you're talking about, send it to someone who has an AMP unit setup in his brass service. Turnaround is fast and results are very consistent.
I also can see why someone would want to develop his own method for annealing and that's fine. Consistency is the key to any method and you would have to attain that for good results down range. Some people have good results from their drill/torch method, others not so much. Have a go at whatever method you choose, the target will tell you how well you're doing.
I anneal all of my brass before I do anything to it.Keep the heat up high and do not get the lower case hot and weaken it. Just play with a few throw-aways first to learn on. I've had to anneal new brass because it wouldn't straighten in the die. I had .007-.009" runout on turned necks and after annealing and resizing, it averaged .002".
I tried this exact version. 2 induction units later I could t make it work. Believe me, I tried. Did the torch / socket method for awhile. In the end I spent around 500 on a used Benchsource. Very happy. Any flame method takes practice as the variables in the torch setting and location within the flame produce different results. No matter what you do, there is no set dwell time in the flame. Each manufacturers brass is different. My Lapua brass cook much longer than Hornady, Winchester. Etc.
If you are even remotely handy AND I use it on other things too.![]()
I agree. That is why I didnt use digital PWM with the annealer units I produce. Every brand uses different brass, and it takes different time to achieve proper temperature in the case neck, plus the flame setup, its hard to set it same way every time. For a moment I wanted to use digital pwm's but luckily good folks here talked me out of itI tried this exact version. 2 induction units later I could t make it work. Believe me, I tried. Did the torch / socket method for awhile. In the end I spent around 500 on a used Benchsource. Very happy. Any flame method takes practice as the variables in the torch setting and location within the flame produce different results. No matter what you do, there is no set dwell time in the flame. Each manufacturers brass is different. My Lapua brass cook much longer than Hornady, Winchester. Etc.
View attachment 1341076
Annealing is a heat treatment to reduce hardness, and increase ductility.You're NOT annealing brass cartridge cases but rather making them malleable .
The term annealing when used with brass is to actually CHANGE the Crystalline alignment within the brass .
All I will say is it can give great returns with a lot of cartridges. Not so much about case life as accuracy and consistency. My flyers all but disappeared. I find it well worth while as any other case prep.I'm not going to disparage annealing because I've never done it so I cannot comment on the best methods or its usefulness. I'm only going to state the "facts' of my experience of not annealing.
I've been reloading now for close about 50 years and I've never annealed bottle neck rifle cases. I've gotten about 15 to 18 reloads in calibers such as the 223 Rem, 22-250, 243 Win, 308 Win. Normally I have to retire the 223 cases because the rims become thin and extraction issue begin to arise. I will see a few neck splits alone the way to the 15 to 18 reloads. If I judge these to be isolated which most of the time they are, I keep reloading that lot until I reach the 15 to 18 thresholds. I will retire a group of cases once loose primer pockets are encountered.
For me, I have amortized the cost of the cases and have obtained a decent amount of case life without annealing. As far as precision (accuracy), my varmint / predator rifles typically group in the 1/2 moa area.
Perhaps I could get more reloads by annealing but I just don't want to spend the effort.
Annealing does seem to offer consistency which is aids in precision reloads, this I do not dispute.All I will say is it can give great returns with a lot of cartridges. Not so much about case life as accuracy and consistency. My flyers all but disappeared. I find it well worth while as any other case prep.
In all fairness, for guys that are shooting 100 & 200 yard benchrest, 1/2 moa simply won’t cut it. For F-Class it wouldn’t be competitive only shooting 1/2 moa at short range.I'm not going to disparage annealing because I've never done it so I cannot comment on the best methods or its usefulness. I'm only going to state the "facts' of my experience of not annealing.
I've been reloading now for close about 50 years and I've never annealed bottle neck rifle cases. I've gotten about 15 to 18 reloads in calibers such as the 223 Rem, 22-250, 243 Win, 308 Win. Normally I have to retire the 223 cases because the rims become thin and extraction issue begin to arise. I will see a few neck splits alone the way to the 15 to 18 reloads. If I judge these to be isolated which most of the time they are, I keep reloading that lot until I reach the 15 to 18 thresholds. I will retire a group of cases once loose primer pockets are encountered.
For me, I have amortized the cost of the cases and have obtained a decent amount of case life without annealing. As far as precision (accuracy), my varmint / predator rifles typically group in the 1/2 moa area.
Perhaps I could get more reloads by annealing but I just don't want to spend the effort.
I understand - I'm just a ground hog and predator hunter, and short range (300 yards and under) by today's standards.In all fairness, for guys that are shooting 100 & 200 yard benchrest, 1/2 moa simply won’t cut it. For F-Class it wouldn’t be competitive only shooting 1/2 moa at short range.
This is what I did, based on the same video. Works fantastic and was $220 total. On a 300wsm, it’d pay for itself in brass pretty fast.
If you are even remotely handy AND I use it on other things too.![]()