Reece on the Range posted an interesting series of tests in which he measured case hardness after greater or lesser periods of annealing.
But the truly interesting measurement he made was that if you resize at the end of your case prep sequence, that work hardening takes the case back to or beyond its pre-annealed hardness.
I have usually completed case prep in the following order: de-prime, anneal, ultrasound, fan-dry, re-size, trim.
My ammunition in all calibers for which I load is accurate, so no reason to alter method on that account. But perhaps the case-longevity benefit of annealing is void if it is not the last process? Anyone have a view on this?
But the truly interesting measurement he made was that if you resize at the end of your case prep sequence, that work hardening takes the case back to or beyond its pre-annealed hardness.
I have usually completed case prep in the following order: de-prime, anneal, ultrasound, fan-dry, re-size, trim.
My ammunition in all calibers for which I load is accurate, so no reason to alter method on that account. But perhaps the case-longevity benefit of annealing is void if it is not the last process? Anyone have a view on this?
