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Rifles, Reloading, Optics, Equipment
Reloading
Annealeez Vs EP Integrations
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<blockquote data-quote="Pdyson" data-source="post: 2333036" data-attributes="member: 74061"><p>The annealeez has served me well. I have a piece of sacrificial brass for each of the 9 bottleneck rifle cartridges I reload. The torch angle and position is very adjustable and having a ruined piece of brass to aim at makes the initial setup process easy and you don't waste good brass setting it up. After a few times setting it up it gets easy. I've been using it going on 4 years now and I'm pleased with the consistency. The only drawback I have is with my .222 brass. It's so short they sit too deep in the plastic wheel. When the bottom plastic wheel comes around to pickup the freshly annealed case, the case will hot glue itself to the wheel. None of the other cases have an issue. I inserted some aluminum foil in the case slot to prevent it from melting the plastic. Metal wheels would be the ultimate fix.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Pdyson, post: 2333036, member: 74061"] The annealeez has served me well. I have a piece of sacrificial brass for each of the 9 bottleneck rifle cartridges I reload. The torch angle and position is very adjustable and having a ruined piece of brass to aim at makes the initial setup process easy and you don’t waste good brass setting it up. After a few times setting it up it gets easy. I’ve been using it going on 4 years now and I’m pleased with the consistency. The only drawback I have is with my .222 brass. It’s so short they sit too deep in the plastic wheel. When the bottom plastic wheel comes around to pickup the freshly annealed case, the case will hot glue itself to the wheel. None of the other cases have an issue. I inserted some aluminum foil in the case slot to prevent it from melting the plastic. Metal wheels would be the ultimate fix. [/QUOTE]
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Rifles, Reloading, Optics, Equipment
Reloading
Annealeez Vs EP Integrations
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