11C1P
Yellow Jacket

I've now got a couple 300 blackouts and of course the ammo ain't cheap so I've dusted off my reloading equipment. Looking around it appears most brass for sale is not factory made ammo but home made stuff cut down from the .223/5.56 case. I ordered a batch and paid the extra for the annealing. While going through all my piles of .223/5.56 brass I noticed a lot have dents around the neck and shoulder area which isn't a huge deal, depending on how bad it is. That being said it got me to thinking that if I made my own 300BLK brass, those areas would be cut off anyway. So I know I would want to anneal it and was looking into ways to do large batches easily, one of the things I found was the $250 toy seen here. The thing I'm wondering is that it seems they've cut the brass, formed it and are then annealing it. Wouldn't it make more sense to anneal it after cutting it, but BEFORE the initial forming? I am not a metallurgist, but I often like to play one in my gun room. I know there are some people on here that do a lot of that sort of stuff and can maybe explain why you wouldn't anneal it before forming, or if you should as I suspect do it before you re-form the brass. :shrug:
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