Okay, somebody call me out on this.
I have at my disposal a heat treating oven. If I were to put the cases in a pan 2/3 submerged in water for 15 min, or however long required so long as sufficient water was still in the pan, to anneal the brass.
The point is if there is still water in the pan the case head never exceed 212 F,much lower than the "critical" 482 F where things start to happen).
I ran a quick test in my home oven on some old cases at 500 F and the water wasn't boiling after 20 min.
I am referencing the temperatures foundhere.
I can't figure out what is wrong with this method. If you know something I don't please...
I know there maybe ea$ier or quicker methods but I don't see how any of them could be more uniform than this.
Thanks,
DG
I have at my disposal a heat treating oven. If I were to put the cases in a pan 2/3 submerged in water for 15 min, or however long required so long as sufficient water was still in the pan, to anneal the brass.
The point is if there is still water in the pan the case head never exceed 212 F,much lower than the "critical" 482 F where things start to happen).
I ran a quick test in my home oven on some old cases at 500 F and the water wasn't boiling after 20 min.
I am referencing the temperatures foundhere.
I can't figure out what is wrong with this method. If you know something I don't please...
I know there maybe ea$ier or quicker methods but I don't see how any of them could be more uniform than this.
Thanks,
DG