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Annealing

You do not have to purchase an AMP to anneal. It's always the latest and greatest that most on here will lead you too. Plenty of good information in the archives on this site for annealing going years back.
Thanks bud you’re right !!! But thank god them people help keep economy going in the sport we love .
 
I also use propane and don’t go by time just look for the dull color in a darkened room. The down side is a learning curve to get it right. It’s best to got some scrap brass and practice.
I have a friend who has an AMP and will have to say it’s a good machine but have wondered that if your going off a chart to set annealing time on brass wouldn’t you have to test each batch (different lot numbers) because of not so exact tolerances of different lots. I guess you could sacrifice a new case of each batch with the Aztec program but for my shooting so far I haven’t had any problems with the torch.
 
There's plenty of DIY annealer plans out there. I made one with just a single drum and have to feed each case by hand. Not an issue for me, but if you did a lot of cases that would prob be a pain. I do it in a darkened room, just light enough to see what I'm doing. Then I look at the dark side of the brass, opposite the flame, to monitor. I have 20 or so pieces of test brass that I use to set it. Once there is a faint glow, that's the setting.
Ok thanks good information
 
There's plenty of DIY annealer plans out there. I made one with just a single drum and have to feed each case by hand. Not an issue for me, but if you did a lot of cases that would prob be a pain. I do it in a darkened room, just light enough to see what I'm doing. Then I look at the dark side of the brass, opposite the flame, to monitor. I have 20 or so pieces of test brass that I use to set it. Once there is a faint glow, that's the setting.
Ok thanks good information
 
The other issue I ran into before I started annealing was hardened brass didn’t size correctly or consistently.
Depending on conditions by 4-10 loadings

it’s amazing how far you can go with a Lee collet and moderate pressure load though.

I’m still an annealing caveman with a torch, I use a method I saw on a video where you gauge annealing time by flame color, at a certain temp other elements in brass will start burning turning flame from blue to orange and that temp is consistent and happens to be temperature that cases are annealed, as soon as you see the color transition your done.

Now I have batches of brass that outlast multiple barrels even in my magnums.
 

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