"Yes. Listen I am certainly no expert on annealing or even shooting (at least compared to some of the amazing shooters I meet, but I do have quite a bit of training in process trouble shooting in manufacturing and I just get the impression that there is as good a statistical argument for inducing variation as there is for eliminating variation with annealing. As far as seating consistency I have my own ideas on why low seating pressure improves seating depth measurements and reducing the interference and making the neck thinner both reduce that without annealing.
To me it's a process thing. That's all. Annealing is another variable. Not to say it doesn't reduce seating pressure.
There is a very good video on YouTube with a world class br shooter and they discuss reducing the neck wall thickness.
There is also a very good article from PS magazine talking about a guy that shot groups in an indoor warehouse for a decade. Shooting tens of thousands of groups. He reduced his neck tension to the point he could seat bullets with the Wilson seated using his hand. He reamed the inside and turned outside and once the cases were prepped they never really varied after that.
Again, I'm no expert. Just discussing what I've seen."
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Bradley, what you described of the warehouse shooter is he learned variance in neck tension has a big effect on accuracy and he reduced absolute variance by reducing total neck tension to a minimum: thin, consistent necks with almost no tension. Annealing is another way to reduce the variance in neck tension. I'm guessing annealing will be more important when there is a larger difference between the chamber and loaded round: brass getting worked more. Also, it's probably more helpful to anneal thicker brass. The point is I think people are working on the same objective and getting there in different ways with different gear. But, reducing variance in neck tension is an important goal producing measurable results on target.
To me it's a process thing. That's all. Annealing is another variable. Not to say it doesn't reduce seating pressure.
There is a very good video on YouTube with a world class br shooter and they discuss reducing the neck wall thickness.
There is also a very good article from PS magazine talking about a guy that shot groups in an indoor warehouse for a decade. Shooting tens of thousands of groups. He reduced his neck tension to the point he could seat bullets with the Wilson seated using his hand. He reamed the inside and turned outside and once the cases were prepped they never really varied after that.
Again, I'm no expert. Just discussing what I've seen."
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Bradley, what you described of the warehouse shooter is he learned variance in neck tension has a big effect on accuracy and he reduced absolute variance by reducing total neck tension to a minimum: thin, consistent necks with almost no tension. Annealing is another way to reduce the variance in neck tension. I'm guessing annealing will be more important when there is a larger difference between the chamber and loaded round: brass getting worked more. Also, it's probably more helpful to anneal thicker brass. The point is I think people are working on the same objective and getting there in different ways with different gear. But, reducing variance in neck tension is an important goal producing measurable results on target.