Turn the lights out and take out as soon as there is a hint of it changing redAre you afraid of doing it yourself in case you get it wrong ?
So was I but after speaking to people and watching some examples on YouTube I’ve tried it and it’s not as difficult as it seems.
My expansive kit list is a Makita drill and a blowtorch.
Set blowtorch, place rounds in Lee shell holder (could probably just spin in fingers) and rotate in hottest part of blowtorch flame for a count of 8 thousand (one thousand, two thousand etc) OR until brass colour changes and ’runs’ down into shoulder.
A rough and ready way for me is if when I remove case from flame - if I can’t touch/hold primer end it’s been in the flame too long.
So far I’ve done 6.5 and .300 cases and all seemed better to full resize and trim/chamfer afterwards.
If I’ve under annealed, then the cases are no worse off.
Instead of a shell holder, just use a socket of the appropriate size. Drop case in, spin, tilt drill down to drop case out into a waiting pan...or quit being poor and get an AMP! (Just pulling your leg, I know not everyone can justify that kind of investment)Are you afraid of doing it yourself in case you get it wrong ?
So was I but after speaking to people and watching some examples on YouTube I’ve tried it and it’s not as difficult as it seems.
My expansive kit list is a Makita drill and a blowtorch.
Set blowtorch, place rounds in Lee shell holder (could probably just spin in fingers) and rotate in hottest part of blowtorch flame for a count of 8 thousand (one thousand, two thousand etc) OR until brass colour changes and ’runs’ down into shoulder.
A rough and ready way for me is if when I remove case from flame - if I can’t touch/hold primer end it’s been in the flame too long.
So far I’ve done 6.5 and .300 cases and all seemed better to full resize and trim/chamfer afterwards.
If I’ve under annealed, then the cases are no worse off.
Any lads close to Surrey that are willing to anneal some brass for me...for a charge of course![]()
maybe I'll put my big boy pants on and have a bash.
Thanks some great reading there!!! Those case holders look top drawer also!I did. And I loved that journey and now have an excellent DIY methodology:
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Annealing: Settled on a method with highest repeatability - using garage tools
A while back I invested some time in building a Skippy-style annealer. As with all projects, the journey is half the fun. But what I soon realised was that the annealer I could make was not going to give AMP performance. And it would be a faff to operate. So...what I have done instead is...www.thestalkingdirectory.co.uk
I have several SD members sending me brass to anneal.Any lads close to Surrey that are willing to anneal some brass for me...for a charge of course![]()
Great idea. I hadn’t thought of that.Instead of a shell holder, just use a socket of the appropriate size. Drop case in, spin, tilt drill down to drop case out into a waiting pan...or quit being poor and get an AMP! (Just pulling your leg, I know not everyone can justify that kind of investment)
But how do you know what the desired temperature is?
Annealing is a combination of time and temperature
Low temperatures for a long time risks softening the head of the case leading to premature case failure
High temperatures for a short time risks melting the brass
Knowing the temperature is not enough - and most temperature indicating paints and pastes react too slowly to the rate of change in temperature used in most brass annealing set ups.
Cheers
Bruce
Interesting. I believe the AMP has the same behavior, in that European brass tends to need longer (higher program number) than US brass. This is for the older, non-Aztec programs.With an induction annealer you can control time and power - the resultant temperature is a function of both those inputs
In my DIY induction annealer I run at fixed power and control the time
The correct annealing time is determined by measuring the hardness at the case neck
I normally start with a time which, from experience, will probably be too short and measure the hardness after that short anneal
Presuming the hardness is still too high, I anneal again with the time increased by 0.5 second.
I repeat this procedure of annealing and hardness testing until I get to a time which results in the case being annealed to the same hardness as new brass.
Interestingly, I have found with my annealer that European brass (Lapua, Sako, Norma, PPU, RWS and Geco) all require longer annealing times (8-10 seconds) than US brass (Hornady, Winchester, Federal and Remington) 6-6.5 seconds
Cheers
Bruce