I don't anneal for short range. I get 15-20 firings on new brass, on average but have gone as far as 50 firings. Yes, after maybe 15 firings, I've dropped down a size on bushings but that alone has brought back top notch accuracy.I find it hard to believe that none of the top short range guys anneal. How many pieces of brass do they carry to a match. Is it annealed and enough to where they don’t have to anneal at the match. Or, are they refiring the same brass during the match. Maybe some will chime in on this issue. Do they all still throw charges or are some of them using fx120s now?
It seems to me that either you anneal or change bushings as necks harden to maintain consistent neck tension. This goes for short range, but even more for long range. I don’t think any of the long range guys go to matches shooting brass with high es. Of course, as long as you keep your brass in the same rotation, annealing is not necessary to maintain low es and some of the best long range guys do not anneal.
There are people that trash brass after an agg. Typically, that brass has more than one firing though, if for no other reason than, a ppc has to be fire formed from 220r brass into ppc brass....if uing Lapua brass. I do know some short range shooters that anneal but their finishing order is no better or worse than the vast majority, that don't.
In truth, the vast majority don't anneal and don't trash brass after a firing or two. But there are some that do, mostly due to loading very hot and loosening primer pockets at those pressures.
I've been doing this for a while now and have never found annealing to be of great benefit in short range until the brass tires a lot. Meaning, in the range of 10-15 firings, but depending on pressures and chamber specs. I will say this, though. Brass that has gone too far, does benefit from annealing. The issue is that by then, the pockets are either loose or you just went too far with it. I've been there and seen the results. In my case, I had double grouping. Two or three shots into a hole and two or three into another hole. New brass was like putting on a new bbl...night and day, but that was at very high pressures, a lot of neck tension and 25 or more firings on those cases.
One thing I'll say is that I prefer a little carbon left in my necks. I don't even clean my brass very often, to retain that carbon. Annealing burns that carbon out. IME, it's worth a fair bit but is not night and day. At this level though, it's enough to matter. Trust me, if you can measure a consistent difference in short range, it's very significant. I don't want to get much into the "Benchrest with a capitol B stuff.". That's commonly referred to as group shooting. I'll just say that if a gun won't group, it won't score well either and leave it at that. Both games are too competitive to leave anything on the table, today.
As for loading at the range, tuners have changed that to some degree. IMO, more for the ones that have a good handle on using a tuner for their benefit than for those that haven't. Been doing that for a while too, and I'm confident in saying that moving a tuner
"properly" is no different than changing the load as the day goes.
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