Follow along with the video below to see how to install our site as a web app on your home screen.
Note: this_feature_currently_requires_accessing_site_using_safari
Guy Miner":1azcyh6a said:Candle... Yup. From John Barsness:
"I use a method perfected by my friend Fred Barker, who writes for some gun magazines, including Precision Shooting. Fred found that the normal annealing methods used for years made the necks too soft, as they normally involved heating the brass to red-hot then quenching in water.
Fred is a retired metallurgist and developed the following:
1) Light a standard wax candle.
2) Hold the case halfway up the body with the tips of your fingers.
3) Heat the neck in the tip of the candle flame until the case is too hot to hold.
4) Wipe the front end of the case with a wet towel (paper towel will do) which finishes the annealing process AND cleans off the candle-flame soot."
I have also used John barnes candle method and works really well. I use a torch now, but still hold half way down the case and anneal until it gets two hot to hold. Has worked very well for me the last couple of years.Guy Miner":2fhvzv97 said:Candle... Yup. From John Barsness:
"I use a method perfected by my friend Fred Barker, who writes for some gun magazines, including Precision Shooting. Fred found that the normal annealing methods used for years made the necks too soft, as they normally involved heating the brass to red-hot then quenching in water.
Fred is a retired metallurgist and developed the following:
1) Light a standard wax candle.
2) Hold the case halfway up the body with the tips of your fingers.
3) Heat the neck in the tip of the candle flame until the case is too hot to hold.
4) Wipe the front end of the case with a wet towel (paper towel will do) which finishes the annealing process AND cleans off the candle-flame soot."