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Thread: Annealing Brass

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  1. #1
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    I believe that is the recommended method for annealing/normalizing brass for that purpose. All the guys that I know that are reloaders do it that way.

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    For rods and pins, you can quench them or let them air cool, either way will give you satisfactory results for the intended purpose. The water bath is just one more thing to set up.

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    Senior Member blabbermouth
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    6gun,

    I rotate the cases between my thumb and forefinger while I put about 3/4-7/8" of the neck into a propane torch flame. I ease the case in and out of the flame until I get a bluish purple oxide on the brass and then pitch it into a bucket of water. This method has cured the blow back soot streaks I'd get on the Starline .45-70 and .45-90 cases I use for black powder cartridge rifle shooting. When I use this technique, the head and rim may get only warm.

    I made lots of assumptions here in that I don't have temp crayons or fancy digital sensors, I just tried to match the oxide color that I saw on on some high end bottleneck commercial cases. It seems to work. (I picture the village smith tempering some tools using the progression of oxide colors to determine what the hardness will be - ifor me it's only best guess as I don't even have a spreading chestnut tree ).

    Bill, you need to get the brass to about 670 degrees to get it soft. If you heat it red, it will become dead soft -- too soft for a cartridge case, but may work OK for a rivet, and red is an easy heat for a propane torch.
    Last edited by Bruce; 10-22-2009 at 10:48 PM.

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    Senior Member kevint's Avatar
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    I am usually doing Cu. Never knew what the low temp was so i heat red and quench. Going to red likely causes more scale and quench shock knocks most off and my copper is always soft as it can be.

  6. #5
    Chat room is open Piet's Avatar
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    What kind of methods besides using a propane torch can I use to heat up a brass rod enough for annealing?

    Which method would you advice a total newbie to use?

  7. #6
    Member freeman's Avatar
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    All you're doing when annealing is applying heat. Any heat source (provided it's hot enough) will do. For common brasses you're shooting for temps between 800 degrees and 1400 degrees.. If you don't have access to a torch you can use a charcoal fire or an electric stove eye to anneal brass although one of the small hand torches from the local hardware store is hard to beat for versatility or convenience.

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  9. #7
    Senior Member smythe's Avatar
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    I put the brass in a needle nose pliers (some folks call it a bird beak pliers) and hold it in the flames over the stove top, when it red I take it out and dump it in a cup of water.

    You can tell the difference between hard and soft if you cut it with a wire cutter, hard brass snaps and fly off when cut, soft brass does not fly and may stick to the edge of the cutter.

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