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Hunting
Long Range Hunting & Shooting
Got my new Bench Source annealer
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<blockquote data-quote="Robbin" data-source="post: 379380" data-attributes="member: 12246"><p>I did both. The rapid cooling does no benefit to brass, but I did the bulk into water, just because I've always done it that way. Then did some tests with the tempillaq from the shoulder to the base. It didn't melt any further down the base if it went into water or not. Of course just letting it cool as opposed to dry, makes the reloading process faster. 6mmBR has an great write up on annealing and they considered a good annealing process to be one that didn't use water at all.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Robbin, post: 379380, member: 12246"] I did both. The rapid cooling does no benefit to brass, but I did the bulk into water, just because I've always done it that way. Then did some tests with the tempillaq from the shoulder to the base. It didn't melt any further down the base if it went into water or not. Of course just letting it cool as opposed to dry, makes the reloading process faster. 6mmBR has an great write up on annealing and they considered a good annealing process to be one that didn't use water at all. [/QUOTE]
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Got my new Bench Source annealer
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