I've been annealing rifle cases for about 5 years now. I deprime, tumble, anneal then size cases. I use a socket chucked up in a drill, I first apply heat indicator just below the shoulder. Then spin case in flame till indicator melts. I use to drop hot case in water now I just drop into a pan and let cool with out water. I try to be consistent as possible with dwell time in the flame
Ok here is what I notice.
No matter how consistent I try to be, and with the aid of heat indicater paste when I size my cases some seem softer then the other i.e. " less tension felt during the sizing process". This leads me to believe that with out a annealing machine there is no way to keep consistent dwell time, thus each case will either be annealed to a different rate and massively effect neck tension. I anneal to prolonge case life and to create a more consistent neck tension. I have noticed that after about 3 firings of annealed cases my groups settle down and become more consistent.
My question is do you guys notice the same thing? Am I doing something wrong? Or is this on par with annealing by hand? And if I want more consistent neck tension I need to buy a motorized case annealer?
Thanks
Ok here is what I notice.
No matter how consistent I try to be, and with the aid of heat indicater paste when I size my cases some seem softer then the other i.e. " less tension felt during the sizing process". This leads me to believe that with out a annealing machine there is no way to keep consistent dwell time, thus each case will either be annealed to a different rate and massively effect neck tension. I anneal to prolonge case life and to create a more consistent neck tension. I have noticed that after about 3 firings of annealed cases my groups settle down and become more consistent.
My question is do you guys notice the same thing? Am I doing something wrong? Or is this on par with annealing by hand? And if I want more consistent neck tension I need to buy a motorized case annealer?
Thanks