What's not clear to me is whether I am supposed to immediately quench the hot finished case in water, or let it cool off on its own?
I intend to start annealing my 223 and 308 cases, and have done some researching on it. I will be using tempilaq 750° paint-on temperature liquid as most folks recommend.
However, it seems that none of the pro's/manufacturers on YouTube who demonstrate their automated rotary machines (like "Ballistic Edge", "Grizzly" or "Bench Source") show the hot cases being dropped into a container of water. However, the guys on YouTube using Tempilaq and doing the one-at-a-time process (like I will be doing) do demonstrate how they drop the cases into water. So, I'm not sure if the guys who are demonstrating their $500-$600 machines are just busy focusing on their machines and didn't bother to properly address this detail of whether to quench or not.....or they actually don't recommend quenching the case.
				
			I intend to start annealing my 223 and 308 cases, and have done some researching on it. I will be using tempilaq 750° paint-on temperature liquid as most folks recommend.
However, it seems that none of the pro's/manufacturers on YouTube who demonstrate their automated rotary machines (like "Ballistic Edge", "Grizzly" or "Bench Source") show the hot cases being dropped into a container of water. However, the guys on YouTube using Tempilaq and doing the one-at-a-time process (like I will be doing) do demonstrate how they drop the cases into water. So, I'm not sure if the guys who are demonstrating their $500-$600 machines are just busy focusing on their machines and didn't bother to properly address this detail of whether to quench or not.....or they actually don't recommend quenching the case.
 
	








 And I read somewhere that the cases should remain at the anneal temperature for longer than a second or two.
  And I read somewhere that the cases should remain at the anneal temperature for longer than a second or two. 
 
		
