giving advice, know for sure virgin cases are hard out of the box?
I have had head separation and case separation in the past with rifles that used cases made up from"Parent cases" None of em ever blew the rifle up.
Rifle barrels are a lot stronger then some of you apparently imagine. I will report my findings and I'm quite certain it won't be an obituary. You don't have to worry Jim, I won't do it at a match
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Pete
OK..... so I thought I'd stay out of this BUT.....
Pete, you're asking questions that have been A N S W E R E D for years. I, for one, have been involved with actual testing of brass case hardness. YES.... "out of the box"..... fired..... twice-fired..... 20-fired and even wrecked cases. My brother-in-law has several hardness testing apparati, testing for "Brinell" and "Rockwell." There's also been some sclerometer and compressive yield block testing altho I personally see little value in scratch testing...
Point is, back in the day a bunch of folks who've since quit the board did send off cases, bring them to work or even buy equipment to actually test brass cases for hardness.
20yrs ago when certain folks were "arguing" (more like just spouting unfounded opinions) to those of us who called Lapua cases "tough" and "hard" pissed a lot of guys off so several people spent a lot of money re-plowing this ground with testing equipment.
There are 7 "new" cartridge companies that I know of as well as some "new formulations" recently produced (like Norma's PPC entry) and several folks have written results of sending off cases to be tested by labs.
I just test them myownself by firing them to failure, comparing against known baselines (Lapua/Win)
But the easy way is just to look at a new Lapua case to see proper annealing, ready for firing. (Yes, the entire case body HAS BEEN annealed several times prior to release but is work-hardened properly and just the n/s annealed before final inspection/ release to be fired for effect)
There have been diagrams posted showing the hardness of various points on the brass case, latest I saw were over on 6MMBR. I'd reference/search the diagram but they kicked me off that board for "being unsafe"..... Try a web search?
On a side note..... head separations have NOTHING TO DO WITH annealing and brass hardness.
Head separations come from excess headspace
period