Nope. You don't need high temperatures to contaminate metals. Dip your gold wedding band into some mercury some time at room temperature and see what happens. Hint: Use a wedding band from a previous marriage which was to a woman you now really hate.Grimstod said:I think you completally missunderstood the post. Those were questions. Lol. Anyway you have a great point about the firing process. But does the chamber get hot enough to anneal the brass? Most mettals only change or except forine contaminants when they are hot right?
Mozella said:Grimstod said:............ snip ...............
I am no metallurgist and only have theory to go on here. "With a gas system you are bombarding the brass with impurities while it is hot thus over time changing the metal." ...... snip ...........
Well, I'm no metallurgist either; however, I studied quite a bit of metallurgy as part of my formal education. I'm not aware of any published literature confirming this theory, are you? If so, please point me in the right direction so that I can find it. I'm curious because you put the statement in quotations as if it were copied from a book or other document.
If it's not from published liturature, I wonder if the theory is all your own developed by just thinking about it or is it something you discovered by empirical evidence?
Assuming that the act of exposing brass to burning propane must surely be doing something and that something must certainly be bad makes no sense to me. First of all, if that were the case, it seems to me that somebody would have heard about it before. After all, people have been heating brass with propane for a long long time. And we're not talking about welding here, or brazing, or even soldering where joint contamination might be a genuine concern.
Furthermore, if heat, brass, and impurities were a concern from a structural standpoint, it would seem that smokeless powder burning inside a cartridge case would be the last thing brass would want to experience. Perhaps we should all be shooting air guns powered by argon.![]()
I anneal 50-200 cases at a time without any problems.itchyTF said:Doesn't the Annie's coil get hot after 10 cycles or so?
Bottom line: I can see some advantages for induction heating, including annealing in a factory setting. But for a typical home hand-loader I would say the cost, complication, reliability, and repair issues far outweigh any advantages. Of course, that isn't to say induction annealing is "bad"; it's just that I can't justify it.
Actually my knowledge on this has come a long way. Annealing marks on brass is the evaporation of the zink in it. Thus gas torches do eventually lessen the purity of your brass, if you can consider the removal of an important component a pollution. This is info I received while taking a tour of the labs at Peterson Cartridge Co.If nothing else I can at least assure you that what you "felt" about gas and "impurities" is wrong. Bottled gases are used with brass filler rod to braze steel, cast iron and other ferrous metals and those bottled gases include acetylene. Which is far "dirtier" than the very clean, dry and almost "sterile" propane used for things like handheld propane torches, propane-fired Coleman lanterns, propane-fired Coleman cookstoves, etc. I don't know where you live but here in my neck of the woods in the midwest U.S. we burn propane in our stoves, water heaters and furnaces and I don't think that would be the case if propane were somehow loaded with "impurities". How long had you been shooting and reloading and apparently throwing away brass prematurely that could have lasted much longer by being annealed periodically before you decided your brass was worth keeping "alive" longer via annealing but before you decided to borrow your friend's machine to avoid "polluting" it with impurities using gas to anneal? And have you purchased your OWN induction annealing machine or are you still borrowing the benefits of your buddy's machine? And as satisfied "user" of an induction annealing machine convinced of its superiority to gas, how did you end up here on an induction annealing machine "review" or "report" thread?
Actually my knowledge on this has come a long way. Annealing marks on brass is the evaporation of the nickel in it. Thus gas torches do eventually lessen the purity of your brass
Warning. I had a typo. I Meant Zink. This is what happens when i type stuff at 2am.

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