wheelgun7360
Silver $$ Contributor
Just annealed these 100 pieces of Starline 223 brass. Going to neck them up to 7mm TCU. Used my Benchsource annealer and was wondering if they look OK as y‘all are the experts! They look decent to me!!
Squeeze the neck on one of the cases with your fingers our pliers. If it has little resistance to being deformed a little oval I would say they got to hot. Sacrifice a scrap case anneal it bright red a see how little stiffness the neck has. If the necks have decent stiffness I would say your OK. I know a lot about annealing but I lost my ability to do hardness testing when I retired. I use a standard handheld propane torch. I used to anneal about 9 seconds which is a little below red. I got tired of seeing the ends of the neck sometimes getting red so I reduced the time to 5 seconds. Probably not annealing but stress relieving. Don't care if it doesn't meet some ones requirement for more heat. The necks are very firm and I have over 20 reloads on my brass. Even at 10 seconds I never got any where near the degree of dark color you have. Factory annealed brass is probably cleaned after annealiing. The color isn't always copper oxide. If there is any lube or cleaning chemical residue on the brass it can have a big affect on the color. Steel wool a few cases and clean only with water or alcohol and see if you get a different appearance. The neck end tips turn red a few seconds before the bulk of the neck. Red is about 1050F. If the tips are starting to turn red I would back off maybe 1 second. For most of us I don't think we will ever see a difference in accuracy regardless what the annealed hardness is. My varmint hunting 6BR shoots any load under .400". Even at 10 seconds I was getting very little color change.Just annealed these 100 pieces of Starline 223 brass. Going to neck them up to 7mm TCU. Used my Benchsource annealer and was wondering if they look OK as y‘all are the experts! They look decent to me!!