Well I had a geraud for years that did me a fine job. But in the back of my mind I always wondered if.i was doing it.right.
I am a.small batch reloader. 50 cases is about all I will do at at a time. I would say that I can do those 50 cases in the time it takes to set up my geraud and test with Templax
Couldn't be simpler to operate.
Damn aztec melts a piece of brass. No problem getting it mixed up in the lineup.
The AMP seems to get the brass much hotter than I ever did with the geraud.
The annealing line looks just like new lapua brass right out of the box
No guessing now if I am doing it right
Is it really necessary? Who knows but it is another fun step in the reloading process. One.of.the.reasons I like annealing is I keep my brass in 50 piece.lots. Now.sometimes.when I am doing load development with a new bullet or powder I may only load 25 or 30 pieces. Hard to keep that 50 by times fired. Well when you anneal you bring them all back to the.same place. Times fired loses its importance
I am a.small batch reloader. 50 cases is about all I will do at at a time. I would say that I can do those 50 cases in the time it takes to set up my geraud and test with Templax
Couldn't be simpler to operate.
Damn aztec melts a piece of brass. No problem getting it mixed up in the lineup.
The AMP seems to get the brass much hotter than I ever did with the geraud.
The annealing line looks just like new lapua brass right out of the box
No guessing now if I am doing it right
Is it really necessary? Who knows but it is another fun step in the reloading process. One.of.the.reasons I like annealing is I keep my brass in 50 piece.lots. Now.sometimes.when I am doing load development with a new bullet or powder I may only load 25 or 30 pieces. Hard to keep that 50 by times fired. Well when you anneal you bring them all back to the.same place. Times fired loses its importance