Leaving the point of what constitutes technical jargon for a moment, when I started this thread I was well aware of the differences between copper alloys, and iron alloys, with regard to annealing. I had also used old instructions, following them as best I could, to do pan annealing, with the result that necks were usable, but softer than I would have liked, and the accuracy decreased. Case heads were unaffected.
Around three decades later, a friend ran into a problem with consistency of shoulder bump for a couple of magnum calibers. He had the budget so a rotary annealing machine, that has two torches, and pauses cases in the flames for an adjustable period of time, was purchased, along with three different temperatures of Tempilac (300,400, and 500 degree) that were used for setup. The result was that necks were not excessively softened, and with some experimentation we were able to process cases so that their shoulder bump was pleasingly uniform.
Because fully annealed brass is in my opinion softer than we like case necks to be, and workable procedures have been developed that modify the hardness of case necks without making them dead soft, I thought that it might be useful to come up with a term to describe what was being done, and since I think that one should reserve coining new words for situations where none exist that fit the requirement, I did a little looking around on the internet and came up with what became the genesis of this thread. In the process I came across numerous references to partial annealing, and I believe process annealing, as a synonym. In any case here is a little light reading. (You may want to do a little centigrade to Fahrenheit conversion at the start, so that the temperatures relate to other posts or literature.)
http://www.journalamme.org/papers_vol40_1/4012.pdf
, and here is the index of a book that has a section, mentioned in the index of partial annealing of copper alloys.http://books.google.com/books?id=cXkNMB1vBesC&pg=SA1-PA3&lpg=SA1-PA3&dq=partial+annealing+of+copper+alloys&source=bl&ots=CM8TM6HVjZ&sig=R5-UONMUW13HbD_5nh6Q-3UzZg8&hl=en&sa=X&ei=sAfNUIbYN-aZiAKtvoGwAw&ved=0CDMQ6AEwAA#v=onepage&q=partial%20annealing%20of%20copper%20alloys&f=false
(Which would seem to indicate that the term is an accepted one, and not some made up jargon.)
Lest someone think that I think that they are doing something wrong, if you do not blow yourself up, and get the results that you are getting are what you want, IMO what you are doing is perfect for you, and your procedure may well may suitable for others in the same situation, that have the same desired outcome.
For what I am doing, I want to retain as much neck hardness (and bullet pull) as I can, and make seating force as uniform as possible.
Thank you all for your contributions. Please continue to post on this thread as the spirit moves you.