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+ 1 for MRB I love mine!I got one from Mike's Reloading Bench. Works great, easy to set up and also has a small base.
I just bought a Giraud, for one reason only, I can load up the tray and continue working on other things in my shop and it keeps plugging away, as long as I hear the little "tink" every 10 seconds I know everything is all right with the world.
If not for that I would continue to anneal the same way I use to, and still do for short runs, roll the case in between my fingers until it get warm at the base and drop it.
I don't understand why people have a problem with an open flame, its not like I'm leaving it going when I'm not in there. But then again I have welding equipment and don't keep flammables by my welding table.
Your doing it wrong then, I load the annealer and my three boys are busy running the giraud trimmer and sorting brass.I understand what you're saying,but with my AMP I can tell my son to get off the video game and anneal his 223 and 6.5x47 brass and when he gets done do mine
My Dad, who had 3 sons, had a saying: "One boy's one boy, two boys: half a boy and three boys: no boy at all."Your doing it wrong then, I load the annealer and my three boys are busy running the giraud trimmer and sorting brass.
About to put the 10 yo pulling the handle on the 1050.
And I have 4 boys. What's that equal?My Dad, who had 3 sons, had a saying: "One boy's one boy, two boys: half a boy and three boys: no boy at all."
I assume my father learned that expression from his father, who also had 3 sons and maybe it came from my great-grandfather, who also had three sons. The moral being that an adult could keep one boy on task but that two boys would find a way to only produce half the output of one and that trying to manage three was a hopeless cause. I'd guess that four boys would be no boys and the adult spending his time trying to pick up the mess they made.And I have 4 boys. What's that equal?
this is true tooI assume my father learned that expression from his father, who also had 3 sons and maybe it came from my great-grandfather, who also had three sons. The moral being that an adult could keep one boy on task but that two boys would find a way to only produce half the output of one and that trying to manage three was a hopeless cause. I'd guess that four boys would be no boys and the adult spending his time trying to pick up the mess they made.
And if i read my email right.. he is from Poland too..https://www.facebook.com/samannealing/
I did some research. This machine costs $1000 ......
Waaaay over my head.
So far, I don't have a buddy who owns an annealing machine and I don't have the shop and tools to build one for myself, ..... snip.......
Dat sho am do be lookin' nice....I'll bet you do. People make crude versions of the "Skip Design" automatic annealing machine for as low as $35 if you can live with a hand feed system. For fifty bucks you can build a fully automatic version which is a bit crude, unless you have access to a lathe or milling machine in which case a fifty dollar version can be quite nice. Most average around a hundred bucks. Mine, cost nearly a hundred and a half because I purchased some very nice ready to bolt together hubs, spacers, and other robotic hardware pieces and I added some extras like a round counter and a automatic sync. system. The idea was to trade a bit of increased expense against my lack of fancy tools since I had mostly hand tools.
My power tools consisted of a jitter saw, a cheap cordless drill, and a desk top drill press. You need some way to cut a groove in the feed drum. I used my little drill press and a Forstner bit. If you can get access to a drill press for 15 minutes, that's all you need. Of course there are others ways to do the same job, including finding a friend with a milling machine or a router. A determined builder could do the job by hand with a round rasp.
A table saw would be nice, but I sold all my tools when I moved to Italy, but I kept my low angle block plane and I used that to true up the edges of my thin plywood box which houses the guts of the annealer. I cut the metal with a hack saw and smoothed the edges with ordinary hand files.
The bottom line is that you "could" do the job entirely by hand with a hand saw, a block plane, etc. Access to a drill press for a few minutes would be nice and a few minutes on a table saw would make the job easier too, but you really don't need any fancy tools to make a nice machine. Here is my version made with nothing more exotic than a small table top drill press.
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