Thanks so much for getting straight to the meat & potatoes of DIY annealing. You have relieved me of my last worries on the matter and confirmed my discoveries with the drill & torch annealing.
Butterbean, thanks for giving me the confidence to try this. And for the reminder that it's supposed to be fun. I'm that guy who starts out keeping it simple then gets sucked down the rabbit hole of overthinking it. I know with my new 7 SAUM barrel I can can shoot under .3 no matter how clean my brass is or if my shoulder bump is .002 or .008 but I still suck myself in every time. Then I get to the range and overthink it there I read your advice when I cna find it on the Long range hunting forum, I had no idea you made a channel. You're actually very good at this teaching thing, I look forward to more.
Thanks for video buttbean I enjoy all the videos you up loaded so far keep up the good work man.also I like your hat as well.i work on many of those weekly and work at freightliner from time to time for rework
I’m like you, a .75 MOA hunter searching for great loads! Looks like a ‘06 AI. Thanks for this video. You made it clear for me and saved me a lot of money. Thanks Bean. P.S. You are abrasive on forum but I get it! Thanks again Bean
ANNEALEEZ has a propane digital unit for $275. Nice for doing a lot of brass (once setup/adjusted). I've got one. Also checkout UA-cam for a DIY induction annealer for around$225. Talk about fast!! Great for doing a box or so at a time. Literally like 1.4 seconds per case and delay between is adjustable. You do have to move the coil from one case to the next but your done in like 3 minutes.
Pls allow me ta go a step beyond consistency: Simplicity is another leg of the milkstool. Ain't thought much on the third leg - bet you got an idea or few tho. Ya seem to be pretty much the opposite of OCD. "Don't make it where it's not fun anymore." Words to live by. Thx for sharin'.
If you are shooting competitively in long distance competitions, you 100% need to invest in the AMP at some point. It without a doubt gives the best consistency and is proven in the competition world and in the lab. Additionally, you stated their is no set hardness that manufactures try to achieve with their brass and that is highly incorrect. Lapua, Peterson, Alpha, ADG, Norma, and others calibrate their annealers for each lot number of brass to achieve a specific Vickers hardness within a certain tolerance.
I and the viewers that I made this for are not competitive shooters so you first comment is void and as far as target harness That’s not what I said at all so you are incorrect and have taken what I said completely out of context
@@butterbeansbarstool5414 5:35 you stated “I have never seen a set standard on annealing hardness… different hardnesses between lots and manufacturers” 1: There are set standards based on US army research and I can provide that research on a later date since I’m not near my computer that has the link to it. 2: Those manufactures I listed have a set standard very close to each other. AMPs studies have shown that when they section a piece of brass and Vickers Hardness test it. 3: I’m highly skeptical of your testing and have doubts you have either done Vickers Hardness tests, the most appropriate test for brass or Rockwell hardness tests. If your testing is by “feel”, feel isn’t a metric you can put an actual number to.
@@jetthreat5000 Test by feel you say ????? Where did you get that from and once again I’ll disagree, Vickers testing is the most precise on brass and other”soft” alloys
Great video, very common sense!
Thank You
Butterbean, thanks for sharing your knowledge and experience!
No worries, I hope it helps you out
Thanks so much for getting straight to the meat & potatoes of DIY annealing. You have relieved me of my last worries on the matter and confirmed my discoveries with the drill & torch annealing.
Butterbean, thanks for giving me the confidence to try this. And for the reminder that it's supposed to be fun. I'm that guy who starts out keeping it simple then gets sucked down the rabbit hole of overthinking it. I know with my new 7 SAUM barrel I can can shoot under .3 no matter how clean my brass is or if my shoulder bump is .002 or .008 but I still suck myself in every time. Then I get to the range and overthink it there I read your advice when I cna find it on the Long range hunting forum, I had no idea you made a channel. You're actually very good at this teaching thing, I look forward to more.
Thanks Bud I really appreciate it, I’m just glad it helped you
Thanks for video buttbean I enjoy all the videos you up loaded so far keep up the good work man.also I like your hat as well.i work on many of those weekly and work at freightliner from time to time for rework
I'm run1983 Freightliner Cabover on our farm, Old School
I’m like you, a .75 MOA hunter searching for great loads! Looks like a ‘06 AI. Thanks for this video. You made it clear for me and saved me a lot of money. Thanks Bean. P.S. You are abrasive on forum but I get it! Thanks again Bean
Thanks Bean you’re the man.
I hope it helps you out
thank you, appreciate it
Thank You as well
Butter Bean how about make some videos using different powders loading the stw I’ve read a bunch of your comments on long range hunting forum
ANNEALEEZ has a propane digital unit for $275. Nice for doing a lot of brass (once setup/adjusted). I've got one.
Also checkout UA-cam for a DIY induction annealer for around$225. Talk about fast!! Great for doing a box or so at a time. Literally like 1.4 seconds per case and delay between is adjustable. You do have to move the coil from one case to the next but your done in like 3 minutes.
Pls allow me ta go a step beyond consistency: Simplicity is another leg of the milkstool. Ain't thought much on the third leg - bet you got an idea or few tho.
Ya seem to be pretty much the opposite of OCD. "Don't make it where it's not fun anymore." Words to live by.
Thx for sharin'.
I really appreciate it
Do you drop into water after the glow?
No Sir I do not, there is no need
If you are shooting competitively in long distance competitions, you 100% need to invest in the AMP at some point. It without a doubt gives the best consistency and is proven in the competition world and in the lab.
Additionally, you stated their is no set hardness that manufactures try to achieve with their brass and that is highly incorrect. Lapua, Peterson, Alpha, ADG, Norma, and others calibrate their annealers for each lot number of brass to achieve a specific Vickers hardness within a certain tolerance.
I and the viewers that I made this for are not competitive shooters so you first comment is void and as far as target harness That’s not what I said at all so you are incorrect and have taken what I said completely out of context
@@butterbeansbarstool5414 5:35 you stated “I have never seen a set standard on annealing hardness… different hardnesses between lots and manufacturers”
1: There are set standards based on US army research and I can provide that research on a later date since I’m not near my computer that has the link to it.
2: Those manufactures I listed have a set standard very close to each other. AMPs studies have shown that when they section a piece of brass and Vickers Hardness test it.
3: I’m highly skeptical of your testing and have doubts you have either done Vickers Hardness tests, the most appropriate test for brass or Rockwell hardness tests. If your testing is by “feel”, feel isn’t a metric you can put an actual number to.
@@jetthreat5000 Test by feel you say ????? Where did you get that from and once again I’ll disagree, Vickers testing is the most precise on brass and other”soft” alloys
@@butterbeansbarstool5414 you should reread section 3.
@@jetthreat5000 You have lost me Neighbor, Have a good evening