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Rifles, Reloading, Optics, Equipment
Reloading
Do you anneal your cases?
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<blockquote data-quote="tlk" data-source="post: 436609" data-attributes="member: 11397"><p>Loner, nice reply and thanks for the links. I can live with going up to 800. Not sure I want to go above, though. I know that below 700 is getting me nowhere with my brass.</p><p> </p><p>But there is still the measurement question that nags at me: how on earth do you tell when they are all annealed the same? Maybe temp and time need to be different from lot to lot, brand to brand, etc. to get to the same annealing between cases. Is there some measuring device that can tell us that each case has the same (or different) "springiness" in it? Measuring based on ES is a kind of after the fact observation - it doesn't tell us what the characteristics were BEFORE, it is only a deduction by observation. And that sucks - at least to me.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="tlk, post: 436609, member: 11397"] Loner, nice reply and thanks for the links. I can live with going up to 800. Not sure I want to go above, though. I know that below 700 is getting me nowhere with my brass. But there is still the measurement question that nags at me: how on earth do you tell when they are all annealed the same? Maybe temp and time need to be different from lot to lot, brand to brand, etc. to get to the same annealing between cases. Is there some measuring device that can tell us that each case has the same (or different) "springiness" in it? Measuring based on ES is a kind of after the fact observation - it doesn't tell us what the characteristics were BEFORE, it is only a deduction by observation. And that sucks - at least to me. [/QUOTE]
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Rifles, Reloading, Optics, Equipment
Reloading
Do you anneal your cases?
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