The way I am doing it, I only have to run the cases in the tumbler once.
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FroggyOne2 said:The way I am doing it, I only have to run the cases in the tumbler once.
300 RUM said:...people are saying they have to be deprimed before hand. I have never deprimed for the same reasons you described.
ElJay said:300 RUM,
Can you provide more details regarding your procedure? Dwell time etc. Seems like you have a quantitative approach. Most discussions I've read simply say" You will get the hang of it after a while".
ElJay
markm87 said:I agree with spclark and Charlie Watson COMPLETELY.
I won't perform any prep until my brass is decapped and clean. It's not the law... but once you do it this way, you'll never go back to filthy loading.![]()
300 RUM said:ElJay said:300 RUM,
Can you provide more details regarding your procedure? Dwell time etc. Seems like you have a quantitative approach. Most discussions I've read simply say" You will get the hang of it after a while".
ElJay
To start one needs to know what and who your working with. I am more less a physicist, so you can only imagine I over engineer and think every thing.
So to start, the brass used for rifle cases = a 70/30 blend.
The C26000 alloy is also known as C260 (or simply 260), alpha brass, 70/30, and cartridge brass. It has many uses in architectural, electrical, hardware, munitions and plumbing industries. C26000 has a nominal composition of 70% copper and 30 % zinc. It is a single phase alloy (", bcc) up to its solidus at 915°C.
Because C26000 is a single phase alloy it is not considered heat treatable, but it can be strengthened by cold working(also known as sizing, not good) and softened by annealing (good). The high work hardening rate of this alloy means cold working can increase the yield strength dramatically, from 75 MPa in the fully annealed condition to over 450 MPa in the full-hard condition. Along with this increase in strength comes a decrease in ductility, from 68% down to 5%. Recovery annealing will restore a small amount of ductility with little change in strength and hardness. Annealing that results in recrystallization can extend the ductility considerably and can more than halve the hardness and strength. Further annealing will lead to grain growth which can produce further decreases in strength and increases in ductility, but can also lead to a lower fracture toughness.
My take on a proper temperature for annealing cartage brass is 700 F to 800 F. The way we anneal is not truly the correct way how ever it does the job and does it well. Truly annealed brass can take hours at a much higher temp and time. Due to the thickness of material much less time and temp is needed.
My annealing machine, the one I built has a SFPM of 5, I use MAP gas not LP (propane) and my torch tip is a target type (better concentration of heat). The torch tip is much closer to the work piece then what you may be used to and the time is shorter also. I use two torches with their flame front crossing at 18 deg, this gives me a pre and post heat condition. My cases spin 180deg as they are entering the pre heat area, continuing into the flame convergence where a 360 deg rotation takes place under full heat to another 180 turn in to the post heat. This is where I have been able to get the most accurate temp reading of 725 F. Oh maybe I should add when the case is in the flame front the temp on average is 820 F and the time in full flame is 1.5 sec, so (pre heat) .75 sec (full heat) 1.5 sec (post heat) .75 sec total time of 3 sec.
zfastmalibu said:I love posts like this! Thank you.
The way we anneal is not truly the correct way how ever it does the job and does it well. Truly annealed brass can take hours at a much higher temp and time.
TC260 said:The way we anneal is not truly the correct way how ever it does the job and does it well. Truly annealed brass can take hours at a much higher temp and time.
I don't mean to quibble but what isn't correct about what we're doing? A full anneal ruins the properties of the brass for our application. A partial anneal or recovery anneal, is the form of annealing that we should be doing. You mentioned specifically that it improves ductility without changing strength and hardness. Those are the exact properties that we want to change and/or maintain so I don't see how what we're doing is incorrect.