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Rifles, Reloading, Optics, Equipment
Reloading
My salt bath annealing
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<blockquote data-quote="LeddSlinger" data-source="post: 1580007" data-attributes="member: 65338"><p>That's probably the most unsafe method of annealing I have ever seen. Only a matter of time before someone is reported to have knocked a hot pot of salts over or allowed them to get too hot and harmed themselves with the fumes. No way is handling hot cases with a glove one at a time faster that an automated torch or induction annealing machine... Plus you HAVE to throw them in water to wash off hot salts then dry the cases which takes even more time.</p><p></p><p>I'll definitely stay with my hopper style torch annealing machine. It may have cost me a little more money to purchase my machine, but its WAY faster and a heck of a lot safer. Set up a for the case I'm annealing, load the hopper full of cases, turn it on and do other tasks in the shop while the machine does all the work for me. Perfectly annealed brass and no drying wet cases afterwards.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="LeddSlinger, post: 1580007, member: 65338"] That's probably the most unsafe method of annealing I have ever seen. Only a matter of time before someone is reported to have knocked a hot pot of salts over or allowed them to get too hot and harmed themselves with the fumes. No way is handling hot cases with a glove one at a time faster that an automated torch or induction annealing machine... Plus you HAVE to throw them in water to wash off hot salts then dry the cases which takes even more time. I'll definitely stay with my hopper style torch annealing machine. It may have cost me a little more money to purchase my machine, but its WAY faster and a heck of a lot safer. Set up a for the case I'm annealing, load the hopper full of cases, turn it on and do other tasks in the shop while the machine does all the work for me. Perfectly annealed brass and no drying wet cases afterwards. [/QUOTE]
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Rifles, Reloading, Optics, Equipment
Reloading
My salt bath annealing
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