Uncle,
Sorry I didn't get back sooner, your analogy has me thinking that if the brass is that far gone, it's time to shit can it. I think we're trying to take this stuff way to far. Read the 6.5x47 Lapua brass thread, one guys states he uniforms flash holes on new brass, that's been drilled out, not punched.
I spend alot of time reloading, but there comes a time!
Well Milo, you do have a point. I cannot go to the range as much as I'd like to, but I do have more time to reload than I need, so I research and try things that one with less time available might consider a waste of time. This is how I learn things that may or may not have great practical value---many times not. Any way, I have more time to read and study than I have to reload or to shoot. So, I spend my time that way for lack of a better thing to do. I haul heavy equipment all over the US, and for instance, I have been stuck in Charlotte, NC for a week waiting for my next load----my guns are at home, and my reloading stuff is at home, so I read and study to stay sane---thought it prudent not to get sanity medications, lest I be put on the no-guns list...
When I am at home, there are no ranges within my price range less than 2 hours away, so I spend more time reloading and fiddling and reading then I do shooting, as gas costs money, and I would rather use it elsewhere than to drive 250 miles round trip every couple days to go to the range.
Thus, I don't get the trigger time that I need, but I am trying to learn all that I can about the reloading etc. I read differing opinions on brass and annealing, and most people wind up in one of two camps:
1.) Shoot the brass until it starts to crack, and then buy new. These folks mostly thing annealing is a waste of time.
2.) Anneal every X number of times shooting, mostly 3-5. These folks mostly swear by annealing, and say that it extends the lifetime of the brass by up to 5 times longer. Saying you anneal every 3 shootings, and get 20 loadings before the brass goes, that makes the brass a rather "cheap" component. If you don't anneal and get only 6 loadings, then the brass is more of an issue in price/round.
I would rather learn the proper way and timing to anneal, spend a little time that I have in abundance, and increase my brass longevity.
If I had less time, I might have more disposable income because of working more, and thus lean towards buying more brass. I probably would not shoot until cracking the casings, though, as if I saved the brass earlier, I would then have it in times of low availability, like now, and could pull it out, anneal it and use it.
To each his own, and probably there is no one "right" way to look at this.