What ballistics will change across cases reloaded 2 dozen times and never annealed?Consistency is key right? If you anneal every 2nd firing, every 5th firing, whatever- that’s not consistent. Every firing do the exact same thing and you’ll see those results on target
Please will you advise re the above-mentioned title.
What ballistics will change across cases reloaded 2 dozen times and never annealed?
4 dozen times?
Both are consistent.
You also have to add in the expander and the bullet seating, though the latter may not add much. I added it all up for a 223 and got about 13% cold work per firing cycle. From what I can gather from technical literature, brass needs about 40% cold work to get the “critical” temperature down to 800-900 deg F. So that would be about 3-5 firings.What I would find more important to decide:
- what is the neck diameter of your sizing die (or bushing used)
- what is your chamber neck diameter
These two values give me an idea of how much you are working the case neck each firing/sizing cycle. The more work, the less cycles between annealing.
They also said that a good way to anneal the case mouth was to use the case in water and torch “to a dull red in a darkened room” ( which gives a temp of about 950F) then tip it over.
Well Brian Litz has data to prove all this hubbub about annealing doesn’t affect accuracy.
“The Modern Advancements series of books can best be described as a journal of his research and development activities. They explore common questions such as the effect of barrel twist at longer ranges, how muzzle velocity affects hit percentages, laser range finders, etc. Volume II explores handloading techniques and what the shooter can do to produce higher quality ammunition. The key objective is to approach the subject matter in a “Myth Busters” science driven approach. They take commonly held beliefs, explore the science behind them and share the results of their testing. One of their more scintillating findings involves annealing and their discovery that it does not have a noticeable impact on accuracy. We can just see the forums lighting up on that topic!”
Above is quoted from http://www.65guys.com/applied-ballistics-seminar/
And there are metallurgical reasons NOT to anneal every firing.
I shoot F-tr using Lapua Palma brass and anneal every time.
Just becomes another step in my brass prep.
Did Litz used a full blown BR comp. rifle off a concrete bench with a field of windflags?Well Brian Litz has data to prove all this hubbub about annealing doesn’t affect accuracy.
“The Modern Advancements series of books can best be described as a journal of his research and development activities. They explore common questions such as the effect of barrel twist at longer ranges, how muzzle velocity affects hit percentages, laser range finders, etc. Volume II explores handloading techniques and what the shooter can do to produce higher quality ammunition. The key objective is to approach the subject matter in a “Myth Busters” science driven approach. They take commonly held beliefs, explore the science behind them and share the results of their testing. One of their more scintillating findings involves annealing and their discovery that it does not have a noticeable impact on accuracy. We can just see the forums lighting up on that topic!”
Above is quoted from http://www.65guys.com/applied-ballistics-seminar/
And there are metallurgical reasons NOT to anneal every firing.
I know of no rifle competition where rewards are based on the least ES or SD. Results on paper TRUMPMy test reloading the same case about 4 dozen times had about 30 fps spread in velocity averaging about 2700 fps. Full length sized Federal 308 Win case in a full length RCBS die with neck honed out to .335". 42 grains of IMR4895 over a Fed 210 primer with a Sierra 165 gr. spitzer boattail.
Velocities stayed consistent in that spread.
The metallic sighted rifle put all shots in about 5/8ths inch at 100 yards.I know of no rifle competition where rewards are based on the least ES or SD. Results on paper TRUMPballistic data.
And the results using annealed brass for comparison?The metallic sighted rifle put all shots in about 5/8ths inch at 100 yards.
Another like test with 56 rounds from a machine rested rifle went in 3/8ths inch at 100 yards with Sierra 168 HPMK bullets.