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Administrator |
The post from AnotherAZWriter regarding his experience with annealed brass got me to think of doing this experiment. We have a brand new Tikka T3 TAC A1 rifle in 3038 Winchester, and we have the AMP annealing machine. I have taken 20 cases of once fired RWS brass from RWS Match ammo. 10 were left as is, and 10 were annealed on the AMP machine, using their recommended settings. Primers are Federal 210M. First load we tried is 46.0 grains of VARGET. 2, 5-shot groups were fired with each lot, at 100 yards. Chronograph is an Oehler Model 35P. Normal brass: 2733 fps. Extreme spread 45 Standard deviation 19 0.923" 2729 fps. ES 34 SD 12 1.476" AMP annealed brass. 2729 fps ES 19 SD 7 0.766" 2710 fps ES 17 SD 6 0.895" I am going to keep shooting them, annealing after each shooting the brass that has been annealed, and leaving the normal brass as is. We will see what the results are after the brass has been work hardened after several loadings. | ||
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one of us |
Standard dies? Bushing dies? | |||
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Administrator |
Standard full length die. All cases were trimmed prior to the test, and I have just noticed something, not sure iof this will continue. I trimmed them after the first firing again. And out of the no annealed brass, 4 required trimming. Out of the annealed brass, 9 required trimming. I don't know what to make of this, but I will continue to trim them after each firing. | |||
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new member |
Thank you for putting this up Saeed I'm interested in the results. Kevin | |||
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one of us |
Thank you for doing this. The results will be interesting. | |||
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One of Us |
wouldn't the annealed brass be softer and more apt to stretch? Aim for the exit hole | |||
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One of Us |
Since acquiring a machine I anneal after each firing. I have had great results on ES and accuracy. I'm interested to hear how you set up the duration Saeed. I used Tempilaq in a long line down the case to get a baseline but I see my heat source changes with time so using time only worked so long. I guess it will be a tempilaq case every now and then going forward. Thanks for sharing. | |||
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Administrator |
The AMP machine has a recommended list of programs for each caliber and make of brass. I am using that. I have shot a few rounds, and will continue this. Once I am done I will post the results. | |||
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one of us |
You don't use Tempilaq with the AMP machine; it uses inductive heating. | |||
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one of us |
I noticed no one answered you. Brass gets less ductile when it is work hardened; that means even if you use bushing dies, the neck is prone to "resist" resizing. Ever notice older cases sometimes seat really easy, esp if they are neck turned? | |||
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Administrator |
Well, a slight plan to the original test rifle. A friend expressed interest in it, and he has taken that rifle. But, I thought it would not detract too much from this test if I just continued with another rifle. The new test rifle is a Robler Titan 6. I used the same brass. The results I posted above were from brass that has been fired once before. I had 20 rounds already loaded, that is the second reload, or third firing, and they got fired while I was out of here. Following are the results of the third reloads: Load is 46.2 BL C2, Sierral 168 MK and Federal 210M primers. No aneealing 2780 fps 27 ES 13 SD 0.529 2745 fps 29 ES 11 ES 0.509 Anneled 2768 fps 11 ES 7 SD 0.253 2769 fps 16 ES 11 SD 0.416 Following is fourth reloads. No annealing 2772 fps 41 ES 18 SD 0.490 2775 fps 36 ES 15 SD 0.671 Annealed 2751 fps 23 ES 9 SD 0.680 2764 fps 23 ES 8 ES 0.548 My intention is to continue shooting these cases until they fail. | |||
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One of Us |
Watch for separation near the heads. That brass stretching has to come from some where. George "Gun Control is NOT about Guns' "It's about Control!!" Join the NRA today!" LM: NRA, DAV, George L. Dwight | |||
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Administrator |
5 No anneal 2721 fps 29 ES 12 SD 0.550 2761 fps 37 ES 14 SD 0.486 Annealed 2757 fps 29 ES 11 SD 0.446 2757 fps 16 ES 6 SD 0.570 6 No annealing 2755 fps 32 ES 12 SD 0.476 2740 fps 28 ES 11 SD 0.390 Annealed 2753 fps 25 ES 9 SD 0.374 2760 fps 53 ES 19 SD 0.318 The following were loaded with 46.1 of H380 Everything else is the same as before. 7 No anneal 2607 fps 5 ES 2 SD 0.416 2598 fps 8 ES 4 SD 0.487 Annealed 2611 fps 17 ES 6 SD 0.432 2597 fps 17 ES 5 SD 0.375 | |||
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Administrator |
The following were loaded with 46.1 of H380 Everything else is the same as before. 8th reload Not annealed 2586 FPS 23 ED 8 SD 0.271 2590 FPS 6 ES 2 SD 0.205 Annealed 2601 FPS 19 ES 7 SD 0.562 2581 FPS 11 ES 4 SD 0.470 9th RELOAD Not annealed 2582 FPS 29 ES 10 SD 0.524 2568 FPS 20 ES 7 SD 0.304 Annealed 2591 FPS 15 ES 6 SD 0.370 2582 FPS 13 ES 5 SD 0.549 The annealed cases definitely expand more, and need trimming more than the ones that have not been annealed. And we continue. | |||
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one of us |
It's interesting the more you fire them, it seems the 'no annealing' seem to 'harden up' into a more consistent state and offer lower ES and SD's. I'm not sure I've shot enough in the last 10 years to get brass to that point though as I'm always moving onto another toy to play with. Shoot straight, shoot often. Matt | |||
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one of us |
The data supports the opposite conclusion; I just analyzed Saeed's data for the following load: Load is 46.2 BL C2, Sierral 168 MK and Federal 210M primers.
2768 11 7 0.253 2780 27 13 0.529 2769 16 11 0.416 2745 29 11 0.509 2751 23 9 0.68 2772 41 18 0.49 2764 23 8 0.548 2775 36 15 0.671 2757 29 11 0.446 2721 29 12 0.55 2757 16 6 0.57 2761 37 14 0.486 2753 25 9 0.374 2755 32 12 0.476 2760 53 19 0.318 2740 28 11 0.39 Average 2760 24.5 10.7 0.451 2756 32.4 13.4 0.513 ES of all groups 18 59 Posting from Excel on AR is painful, but suffice to say, group size is smaller (.451 vs .513), MV SD is smaller (10.7 vs 13.4), and perhaps most importantly, the ES of each individual group is far lower for the annealed group (19 vs 59). You can see it in his data: while the SD within a group of five doesn't vary that much, over time it does; as the necks harden the MV falls off. I want consistent MV over time. | |||
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One of Us |
I just ordered one and all the pilots I need. Got most of the stuff from Brownells, they have them $100 off right now. I had to get the shellholder and my 45-70 pilot from Creedmore. Which pilot do I use for my 300 Ack? The 340 Wby pilot or the 416 Rem pilot? | |||
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one of us |
Some years past in the years of WW2 my dad and I annealed milsurp 30-06 brass as brass was impossible to come by...We annealed and trimmed those 40 cases every firing and that brass lasted for about 7 or 8 years and a multitude of firings. Today with that wonderful PPU brass I still trim but don't anneal. I just buy another 100 rounds and go from there...If I had one of those expensive annealing machines I would anneal everything as it would be fun and interesting...I just can't find it in me to justify a commercial machine for the little amount that I shoot these days..also today I would anneal about every third firing as opposed to every time. I assure annealed brass will last much longer than non annealed brass, but PPU brass is about $55. per hundred so that's something to think about... Ray Atkinson Atkinson Hunting Adventures 10 Ward Lane, Filer, Idaho, 83328 208-731-4120 rayatkinsonhunting@gmail.com | |||
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