I have recently dabbled in using the salt bath annealing process and thought i would share what i have learned. Usual caveats and warnings apply I.e don't blame me if you burn your face off or your house down.
Kit
PID controller not essential but fun to make and generally a little more precise.
Idea is to heat salt up to 500c and then dip the appropriate bit of brass for circa 6 sec then quench.
Supposedly it's more forgiving than flame as the salt cannot overheat the brass and you'd have to leave it in for a very long time to get the temp into the case head or web.
Main gripe so far is establishing and maintaining the correct level of salt as it's difficult to see, difficult to remove said 500c molten salt...
Timing is done via metronome, I am still coming to grips but it is supposedly quite forgiving.
Melting salt the first time is a bit squeaky bum as the impurities and melter burn off and settle. Not something you want to do without ventilation!
More pics to follow.
Kit
- Lee melter
- M6 x 50mm bolts and nuts, stainless
- Sheet steel
- Thermocouple
- Digital thermometer
- Potassium nitrate
- Sodium nitrite
PID controller not essential but fun to make and generally a little more precise.
Idea is to heat salt up to 500c and then dip the appropriate bit of brass for circa 6 sec then quench.
Supposedly it's more forgiving than flame as the salt cannot overheat the brass and you'd have to leave it in for a very long time to get the temp into the case head or web.
Main gripe so far is establishing and maintaining the correct level of salt as it's difficult to see, difficult to remove said 500c molten salt...
Timing is done via metronome, I am still coming to grips but it is supposedly quite forgiving.
Melting salt the first time is a bit squeaky bum as the impurities and melter burn off and settle. Not something you want to do without ventilation!
More pics to follow.
