Boogsawaste
Member
Ok long story short I was trying to speed up drying time after wet tumbling my brass a week ago so I could load quicker. I put a few handfuls of brass in a colander at a time and used my heat gun to help evaporate the water. Usually I have them in the sun but it was really cold out and cloudy...
Anyway I laid the heat gun on the ground facing the colander and used my hand to stir the brass. It got good and hot but obviously not enough to give me blisters. I didn't pick any up or I might have had some burns but quickly mixing them didn't do that.
I can't remember if the gun was on low (750*), or high (1000*).
I shot a bunch of it this past weekend and nothing happened but I came across some information stating that a few seconds at 800* will anneal a case. Even the low setting is close to that and I'm hoping that I didn't destroy a bunch of brass.
Maybe I'm an idiot for thinking that I started to anneal parts of the brass that shouldn't be annealed, maybe I really did do some damage? This is what concerns me.
Problem is that I threw most of the 38 specials that I did this to into my clean bin (with about 1000+ others that were dried normally in the sun), and dried my entire supply of 30-30 with the heat gun!
I shoot the 30-30's over red dot and Trail Boss Reduced Loads and only shoot factory loads for full power (just don't have any rifle powder), and the 38's even at max power are still low pressure.
Is this a case of "don't worry about it" or should I start collecting new brass?
Advice?
On a side note I found a GREAT reduced load for my marlin 336. I was able to manage a 3/4" group (7 shots), at 50 yards from a bench using my range bag for support. Best before that was 1.25". I'm sure it would shoot better than I can.
Anyway I laid the heat gun on the ground facing the colander and used my hand to stir the brass. It got good and hot but obviously not enough to give me blisters. I didn't pick any up or I might have had some burns but quickly mixing them didn't do that.
I can't remember if the gun was on low (750*), or high (1000*).
I shot a bunch of it this past weekend and nothing happened but I came across some information stating that a few seconds at 800* will anneal a case. Even the low setting is close to that and I'm hoping that I didn't destroy a bunch of brass.
Maybe I'm an idiot for thinking that I started to anneal parts of the brass that shouldn't be annealed, maybe I really did do some damage? This is what concerns me.
Problem is that I threw most of the 38 specials that I did this to into my clean bin (with about 1000+ others that were dried normally in the sun), and dried my entire supply of 30-30 with the heat gun!
I shoot the 30-30's over red dot and Trail Boss Reduced Loads and only shoot factory loads for full power (just don't have any rifle powder), and the 38's even at max power are still low pressure.
Is this a case of "don't worry about it" or should I start collecting new brass?
Advice?
On a side note I found a GREAT reduced load for my marlin 336. I was able to manage a 3/4" group (7 shots), at 50 yards from a bench using my range bag for support. Best before that was 1.25". I'm sure it would shoot better than I can.