Good post Wayne
I'm surprised more shooters aren't aware of the need to learn annealing. Or buy new brass I quess.
I've seen several reloaders, myself included, that shoot factory rifles with large neck dimensions.
They shoot and shoot and shoot and eventually their pet loads lose accuracy. Many never know why.
I do this test on my own ammo almost everytime I shoot factory guns. Done it on other reloaders ammo and am surprised by the looks I get.
Flip a fired cartridge onto another cartridge in the box. You may be surprised how many folks are firing brass thats so hard a fired case will not slip over the next bullet in line.
I'm not kidding. Seen it on several occassions.
Why a friend of mine who thinks all this VooDoo we discuss here has no real bearing on accuracy actually started tuning his loads by shoulder bump.
His freakin brass was so hard he was actually regulating blowby!!!
He also complained to me his new Redding die I suggested he buy would only size half the neck. I found out he had the bushing backed all the way out and it was sizing nothing.
In true macho fashion he still refuses my help. To each their own. 10 years of load testing for the same Rem 308 and he still has a 2moa gun.
FWIW
In my expierience, but admittedly against logic, brass that is super hardened will take longer in X amount of flame to anneal correctly. Similarily, once annealed it takes a much shorter time to bring it back to the proper state if done regularily.
My 30BR brass really proved that for me once and for all. I attempted to anneal it twice with regular propane but still was having issues with intermittent hard bolt lift even with light loads.
Bought some Mapp gas and went to a full count of 30 before I saw the blue line trace itself down the shoulder. .0095" necks at a count of thirty

Lapua 308W is annealed at a count of 15 using propane. Never would've thunk it.
I know 30BR brass technically should'nt need to be annealed according to the lords of 30 but I was having all sorts of issues with mine.
Never annealed them again since finally getting it right. So far all is good.