Hello,
I am very new to annealing brass, and I wanted to get some advice on why I get weird lines and color patches on my brass necks.
I'm using 308 Remington brass and annealing using the drill + socket method using a torch.
I believe I'm not over-annealing the brass and am stopping just before the brass starts changing color. I may also be wrong. I know that eyeballing the color is not a great method, but that's the best I can do right now.
I noticed that I also get these lines that form even if I under-anneal the brass. Basically, after around a second and a half under the flame, I can see those lines forming and changing color. Since this happened last time, I used some very fine steel wool to "clean/polish" the neck, but I still got the same result.
If anyone would mind letting me know what is happening and if those rounds are safe to load, please let me know!
Here are the pictures of the brass after annealing them (they were cleaned using steel wool before annealing)
***Also note, the color contrast is way more in the pictures than it is in real life***
Thanks!
I am very new to annealing brass, and I wanted to get some advice on why I get weird lines and color patches on my brass necks.
I'm using 308 Remington brass and annealing using the drill + socket method using a torch.
I believe I'm not over-annealing the brass and am stopping just before the brass starts changing color. I may also be wrong. I know that eyeballing the color is not a great method, but that's the best I can do right now.
I noticed that I also get these lines that form even if I under-anneal the brass. Basically, after around a second and a half under the flame, I can see those lines forming and changing color. Since this happened last time, I used some very fine steel wool to "clean/polish" the neck, but I still got the same result.
If anyone would mind letting me know what is happening and if those rounds are safe to load, please let me know!
Here are the pictures of the brass after annealing them (they were cleaned using steel wool before annealing)
***Also note, the color contrast is way more in the pictures than it is in real life***
Thanks!