So I'm trying annealing for the first time. I'm using a European brand of brass that is rumoured to have good consistency but rather stiff necks. After about 3 times reloading these cases I put them in a hex socket mounted to a handheld drill and held the shoulder of the case in front of a butane/propane mixed gas burner. It says 1925 C on the can but that doesn't worry me too much. I kept the case spinning slowly for 7-10 seconds, dropping the case out of the socket when I saw the neck and shoulder area change colour. I've read that you're supposed to look for a blueish tint, but I got mostly silver.
The base of the case were too hot to touch when I quit heating the case up, but the discoloration from the heating is far from the base of the base.
Does it sound like these cases are safe to fire or am I going out on a thin branch?
I've read that you're supposed to be prepared to lose some brass when learning annealing. How am I supposed to know when I should discard a piece?
I also tried "annealing" a case for 20-30 seconds. It turned all kinds of colours, including silver all the way down to the base. The neck on that case can be deformed easily. It's definitely wasted.
The purpose of the annealing is to improve accuracy after having some problems that I associate to uneven neck tension, mainly that the overall length can vary significantly within a batch of reloads even though I have the same settings, lube and lever stroke on every round in the batch.
The base of the case were too hot to touch when I quit heating the case up, but the discoloration from the heating is far from the base of the base.
Does it sound like these cases are safe to fire or am I going out on a thin branch?
I've read that you're supposed to be prepared to lose some brass when learning annealing. How am I supposed to know when I should discard a piece?
I also tried "annealing" a case for 20-30 seconds. It turned all kinds of colours, including silver all the way down to the base. The neck on that case can be deformed easily. It's definitely wasted.
The purpose of the annealing is to improve accuracy after having some problems that I associate to uneven neck tension, mainly that the overall length can vary significantly within a batch of reloads even though I have the same settings, lube and lever stroke on every round in the batch.
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