Ricky Bobby
New member
Decided this morning that I was going to try annealing some brass for the very 1st time. I have read up on the subject several times & have learned that there are numerous ways of doing it, which are probably all debateable. Anyways, I decided I would keep things as simple as possible for my 1st time around. I had some once fired .204 Hornady brass that came from factory loaded ammo, which is what I decided to anneal. I have heard of the Hornady .204 brass only lasting for 3 or 4 reloadings and split necks start showing ... so I figured it couldn't hurt to try annealing it right from the start. I found a 3/8" deepwell socket that the .204 brass fit perfectly inside of. It held it without it being able to flop around but when I flipped it upside down the brass case would slide out on it's own. Perfect for when I get it hot enough and wanted to drop the case in a bucket of cool water.
This is a pic of my reloading area with the bucket of water sitting on the floor next to me while I was annealing.
I left my torch running constant at a somewhat medium to light setting, on top my bench. With all the lights out in the basement, I would load a casing & raise the drill slowly into the flame. All the while watching as the case neck started to change colors. It would go black then kind of blue and then to a deep dark maroon and at that second I would quickly dump the brass case into the bucket of water. Here is a pic of me raising a case towards the torch, to start heating it.
I tried to time them as I was heating them but I found it much easier to do it by sight. I think it was taking somewhere around 7-8 seconds per case. I tried holding the flame at the base of the necks, where they met the shoulders. This last pic is of the brass after I removed it all from the water bucket. I stood them upside down to let them dry.
So ... I just gotta hear from the experts! Does my brass look like it's properly annealed? I haven't a clue whether I'm in the right or wrong. I need honest opinions and or suggestions. Thanks for looking!
This is a pic of my reloading area with the bucket of water sitting on the floor next to me while I was annealing.
I left my torch running constant at a somewhat medium to light setting, on top my bench. With all the lights out in the basement, I would load a casing & raise the drill slowly into the flame. All the while watching as the case neck started to change colors. It would go black then kind of blue and then to a deep dark maroon and at that second I would quickly dump the brass case into the bucket of water. Here is a pic of me raising a case towards the torch, to start heating it.
I tried to time them as I was heating them but I found it much easier to do it by sight. I think it was taking somewhere around 7-8 seconds per case. I tried holding the flame at the base of the necks, where they met the shoulders. This last pic is of the brass after I removed it all from the water bucket. I stood them upside down to let them dry.
So ... I just gotta hear from the experts! Does my brass look like it's properly annealed? I haven't a clue whether I'm in the right or wrong. I need honest opinions and or suggestions. Thanks for looking!