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Long Range Hunting & Shooting
Brass Prep for long range accuracy
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<blockquote data-quote="muleystalker" data-source="post: 1710742" data-attributes="member: 79944"><p>This is what I do, start with new brass, never clean just wipe before full length sizing and after. No expander. And yes I shoot new brass and fire form loads in 1000 yard F-class comps with no ill effects. If you look at the top f class and BR shooters almost all full length size and don't clean their brass. As far as the annealing, all new brass is annealed, just because you can't see the discoloration doesn't mean it isn't annealed. They polish the brass to make it pretty. The practice of leaving the annealing marks comes from the military contracts, the anted to be able to see it for quality control purposes and it was the polishing one less process they could save cost on. Even ADG brass offers it annealinging marks showing or polished. Anesling is part of the manufacturing process, it is annealed several times through the forming process.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="muleystalker, post: 1710742, member: 79944"] This is what I do, start with new brass, never clean just wipe before full length sizing and after. No expander. And yes I shoot new brass and fire form loads in 1000 yard F-class comps with no ill effects. If you look at the top f class and BR shooters almost all full length size and don’t clean their brass. As far as the annealing, all new brass is annealed, just because you can’t see the discoloration doesn’t mean it isn’t annealed. They polish the brass to make it pretty. The practice of leaving the annealing marks comes from the military contracts, the anted to be able to see it for quality control purposes and it was the polishing one less process they could save cost on. Even ADG brass offers it annealinging marks showing or polished. Anesling is part of the manufacturing process, it is annealed several times through the forming process. [/QUOTE]
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Brass Prep for long range accuracy
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