Been reading though a lot of past annealing threads and the often suggested The Art and Science of Annealing. And I feel like I know less about the matter than I did before, except that I should spend 400 dollars on a annealing machine!
My plan is:
* Grab either 650 Tempilaq and put it in the neck (I have heard its kinda hard to see when it burns off) or 450 (maybe 400?) and put it below the shoulder (how far below?).
*Toss the brass in a drill, spin it at max speed under a butane torch till the Tempilaq burns off.
After I get some idea of how long this takes, I'll go without the Tempilaq (or maybe I'll just use it anyway). I will primarily be annealing 300 win mag brass (Winchester and Remington headstamps). Any suggestions on this plan?
I know some guys don't think annealing is worth it, but unless you have a cheap source of 300 win mag brass, I'd like to squeeze as much out of this brass as possible. And an annealing machine just isn't in the cards for now (I know they're great, and I know you couldn't live without yours ).
My plan is:
* Grab either 650 Tempilaq and put it in the neck (I have heard its kinda hard to see when it burns off) or 450 (maybe 400?) and put it below the shoulder (how far below?).
*Toss the brass in a drill, spin it at max speed under a butane torch till the Tempilaq burns off.
After I get some idea of how long this takes, I'll go without the Tempilaq (or maybe I'll just use it anyway). I will primarily be annealing 300 win mag brass (Winchester and Remington headstamps). Any suggestions on this plan?
I know some guys don't think annealing is worth it, but unless you have a cheap source of 300 win mag brass, I'd like to squeeze as much out of this brass as possible. And an annealing machine just isn't in the cards for now (I know they're great, and I know you couldn't live without yours ).