I have been researching and reading up on annealing for months and to me it's easily the most debated topic in the reloading process. It seems there is no provable or fact based way to justify any method one uses. One thing that is agreed is consistency, which makes perfect sense and is top of my interest as well. I am results driven and if I am going to anneal (in some people's eyes) the "wrong" way but am getting consistent shoulder bumps and consistent neck size with minimal spring back translating to lower ES, well thenI don't care if it's "wrong".
In what I've read and for my wants and needs I decided to go with a Benchsource annealer. I haven't even used it yet.
I do have a question though that I have not found or have seen addressed. If I have a batch of 4x fired brass that has never been annealed and another batch of 4x fired that has been annealed after every firing. Then if the 4x non annealed was to get annealed and the 4x fired that has always been annealed are they the same softness and become equal? So basically, in terms of shoulder and neck softness/spring back, does annealing the brass no matter how many times fired, in essence "level the playing field" and make them in those terms equal again?
In what I've read and for my wants and needs I decided to go with a Benchsource annealer. I haven't even used it yet.
I do have a question though that I have not found or have seen addressed. If I have a batch of 4x fired brass that has never been annealed and another batch of 4x fired that has been annealed after every firing. Then if the 4x non annealed was to get annealed and the 4x fired that has always been annealed are they the same softness and become equal? So basically, in terms of shoulder and neck softness/spring back, does annealing the brass no matter how many times fired, in essence "level the playing field" and make them in those terms equal again?