I am relatively new to loading. Does anyone know what would cause the neck to turn red after annealing and cleaning. Did they overheat or where they under annealed?
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I am relatively new to loading. Does anyone know what would cause the neck to turn red after annealing and cleaning. Did they overheat or where they under annealed?
Thanks I will do that. I am doing them in the dark for 7 seconds on 308 caliber. I was told to anneal them in the dark to see when the neck glowed (until the neck turned red).You should see some tarnishing. Red likely means you've over annealed. Take a pair of pliers to it. If it crushes easily than it's too malleable meaning you've over annealed.
You should get some tempilaq 700deg or 750deg. I wouldn't guess with annealing.
I am relatively new to loading. Does anyone know what would cause the neck to turn red after annealing and cleaning. Did they overheat or where they under annealed?
Yep, I have a Metronome and set it for 120 beats per minute. I use it now with the Annealeez to lock-in dwell time for each type case. Once the flame cone length is set ( same setting for all cases) Its just a matter of adjusting dwell for the perfect anneal. Easy peasyGotcha,
I'm assuming you've used an Anneal-Rite? Couldn't you get a metronome after you figured out your burn rate and go by time?
I'm not a fan of the drill method.
I'm all about spinning the case if possible. I just imagine it would hard to be consistent using the drill method since it's done free handed. I think you can get about the same distance from the flame most of the time, and probably within 1 second dwell time.
As either of those variables change it would effect the other. So each case won't be consistently annealed.
The anneal rite system seems easier to me and costs about the same as the drill method assuming you have a rest and drill already.
The only scientific paper on the subject of case annealing has shown that the drill/torch method produces inconsistent results and the author concludes that not annealing is better than inconsistent annealing.
I'd take exception to that conclusion, evidenced by my experience with cases annealed by my drill'n'torch protocol (done with care to be as consistent as I believe possible) vs cases not annealed after repeated use.
Maybe the key word here is inconsistent. Like I said I strive to set torch flame size the same for each session, regulate timing by metronome, drill speed is fixed by variable power supply to my Milwaukee 1/2 drill, case to flame distance gauged by eyeball.
It's worked fine for me for several years now though I admit I have plans to build one of the DIY devices described elsewhere here, to Skip's design. Parts sourced from eBay via China have arrived, I'll be starting fabrication over the weekend when it's too darn cold here to do much of anything outside.