SteveOak
Gold $$ Contributor
		Norm,
Thanks for the response.
I probably should have mentioned that my day job is the protection of avionics that fly heavy commercial jets from the effects of electromagnetic interference and lighting.
You did not mention the measured resistance of the cases. What resistance do you typically measure on say a 6 BR case? 6.5 X 47 Lapua case? 308 case? Do you see much of a difference with cases from different manufacturers? Winchester, Remington, Lapua, Norma and so on.
So there are fans blowing air directly on the "work coil" and the case being annealed?
What is the temperature range of the "work coil"? How much does it vary from start up to having annealed 100 cases? 200 cases?
Pix would probably help me understand better.
				
			Thanks for the response.
I probably should have mentioned that my day job is the protection of avionics that fly heavy commercial jets from the effects of electromagnetic interference and lighting.
You did not mention the measured resistance of the cases. What resistance do you typically measure on say a 6 BR case? 6.5 X 47 Lapua case? 308 case? Do you see much of a difference with cases from different manufacturers? Winchester, Remington, Lapua, Norma and so on.
So there are fans blowing air directly on the "work coil" and the case being annealed?
What is the temperature range of the "work coil"? How much does it vary from start up to having annealed 100 cases? 200 cases?
Pix would probably help me understand better.
 
	








 
 
		 
 
		 ) kicking over rocks until I find sufficient evidence that either gas or induction is the better method or if perhaps neither has an advantage over the other. Perhaps is comes down to the specifics of the methodology, that is to say the inherently better method is only superior if it is applied in a certain way.
) kicking over rocks until I find sufficient evidence that either gas or induction is the better method or if perhaps neither has an advantage over the other. Perhaps is comes down to the specifics of the methodology, that is to say the inherently better method is only superior if it is applied in a certain way. 
			

 
 
		
