Lee Martin
Active member
I ran a little trial this summer after reading-up on annealing. Using a 6 BR (0.268" neck, 0.0015" total clearance) and Lapua brass on its 10th reload, I annealed half. The other half were left as is.
Results - the groups opened-up on the annealed for the first 1 - 2 firings, then slowly came back and shot great. The unannealed returned similar, yet consistent groups throughout. Over the chrono, the annealed gave slightly lower velocities, but also slightly lower extreme spreads (yet the groups grew....go figure). All of this was done at 100 yards, so perhaps the results would be different farther out.
Other notes - annealng was done on a Bench-Source machine with 700 degree Tempilaq. As for the loads, I'm shooting LT and aim for 0.0025" neck tension.
Now there's nothing scientific about this trial. Certainly not enough to drive me to hard conclusions. I understand the benefits of annealng for case life and like the practice. But for consistency sake, if I were to anneal I'd do it after each firing.
-Lee
www.singleactions.com
Results - the groups opened-up on the annealed for the first 1 - 2 firings, then slowly came back and shot great. The unannealed returned similar, yet consistent groups throughout. Over the chrono, the annealed gave slightly lower velocities, but also slightly lower extreme spreads (yet the groups grew....go figure). All of this was done at 100 yards, so perhaps the results would be different farther out.
Other notes - annealng was done on a Bench-Source machine with 700 degree Tempilaq. As for the loads, I'm shooting LT and aim for 0.0025" neck tension.
Now there's nothing scientific about this trial. Certainly not enough to drive me to hard conclusions. I understand the benefits of annealng for case life and like the practice. But for consistency sake, if I were to anneal I'd do it after each firing.
-Lee
www.singleactions.com