Assignment: Look up Gary Ocock's records, and note his position in the BR Hall of Fame. I mention these because he does not clean the inside of his case necks....at all.
i posted here for two specific reasons.
score shooters
long range shooters.
both preload and have time.
i realize most of what is here is short range,
but if you do not ask you do not find out.
for those that do not know,
ss pins and soap in water will clean
your brass inside and out,including primer pockets,
your brass looks like new.
but it is a longer slower multi step process
that includes a drying step.
I shoot short range, I shoot score also long range bench and I shoot f class open and FTR
I have been very successful in all these class . I do a unbelievable amount of testing. Along with pressure testing . I have never proven cleaning inside your neck to improve anything . And I will also throw in there cleaning Primer Pockets has never proven anything . So I vote don't clean them .
Spend your time on load development and wind reading.
A couple weeks ago. At the range. A friend shows me his really clean brass. He does the SS pins thing. Loaded up 5 rounds. None would fire. While talking about the cleaning process, he forgot to check the primer pockets. They were wet...A Q-tip took care of it.....
Thinking about it some more. That SS pin cleaning would be real nice after annealing....
Pete,
The hardness tests have been done and published, years back in Precision Shooting. I have not looked recently, but the information may be in the Benchrest Primer. In any case, annealing the entire case would be completely undesirable because the strength of the head of the case depends on its being hard. This is old information, going more than a century. That is the reason that the old method for annealing cases involved standing them in a pan of water. If you are having click issues, perhaps you should be looking into a chamber reamer that is slightly larger at the back, or having your barrels polished out a little in this area.
Boyd
thanks pete...i like your idea of using a 308 sb die.
about opening up the back of the chamber if you have a click problem. I never did it to any of mine; kept forgetting that was something I should do.
Pete