Keith Glasscock
Gold $$ Contributor
I'm new to precision annealing.
I annealed some Winchester cases with my new annealing machine (a Rube Goldberg device of the best kind). The process left a very light blue across the entire shoulder and ended just below the body-shoulder junction. The neck became a bit more coppery colored (darker gold).
After getting that done, I resized them and threw them into the tumbler with corncob media to get the lube off. I forgot to pull them out when I intended to and relly polished them up good. The artifacts (coloring) of the annealing all but disappeared.
Did I under-anneal them? The necks sized with very equal pressures that were quite different (easier) than the work-hardened brethren. They also definately sprung back after sizing like they should, so I think I didn't do too much. Is there a good test other than etching and microscoping them?
Thanks,
Keith
I annealed some Winchester cases with my new annealing machine (a Rube Goldberg device of the best kind). The process left a very light blue across the entire shoulder and ended just below the body-shoulder junction. The neck became a bit more coppery colored (darker gold).
After getting that done, I resized them and threw them into the tumbler with corncob media to get the lube off. I forgot to pull them out when I intended to and relly polished them up good. The artifacts (coloring) of the annealing all but disappeared.
Did I under-anneal them? The necks sized with very equal pressures that were quite different (easier) than the work-hardened brethren. They also definately sprung back after sizing like they should, so I think I didn't do too much. Is there a good test other than etching and microscoping them?
Thanks,
Keith