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.