Probably a typo. 750 or 650?
3/8" should be good. Tempilac takes the guesswork out of the process
3/8" should be good. Tempilac takes the guesswork out of the process
You've probably already read this, but brass will anneal within a few seconds once it has reached 800f. Sounds like you are on the lower end. No expert hereI used 650°F Tempilac. Salt bath was kept at ~515°C. I dipped 8 pcs of junk brass and timed the Tempilac color change for each. It was 4 seconds on each piece. Once I got the time duration down I dipped my hunting brass. It's so fast I only dipped one at a time!
Only pia is having to rinse, then dry them. I used my jerky dehydrator and went to do something else for an hour. So far I am well pleased and now feel I have good control of the process.
The metallurgy tables describing annealing color and temps of brass are very clear, which is great. I was tired of all these techniques that were all over the place.Yep. Starting on lower end to try it and see how it works. I've read conflicting information on the desired annealing temp? If this works well I'll stay. I may get some 750 if I can find it - to see if I can detect any difference.
I quit annealing years ago because it was so trial and error and imprecise. I learned about the tempilac on this thread and now feel more confident
I'm basically OCD.
I don't like "winging" it!
The metallurgy tables describing annealing color and temps of brass are very clear, which is great. I was tired of all these techniques that were all over the place.
Great question because it Was harder to find the info than I thought. Here are a couple sources I found when lookingCan you post a link to these standardize metallurgy tables than give a chart for color = temp? I have never seen one. I have seen color used for general description but never something scientific that color = temp.
IMO it would be impossible as visible color is greatly effected no only by brightness of ambeint light but also the color range of that light source as well plus other enviornmental factors etc. Maybe I am miss understanding what the chart being mentioned is reffering to.
I did a search refering "annealing brass metallurgy color temperature "
This was the best I found (did not do exhaustive search)
Everything else was just lay people trying to describe a color or precise time temp charts giving again a general description. I usually have very good googlefo but Im falling short...lost my mojo.
Good references! Thank you!
I read the two articles. In the "Work Hardening and Annealing" experiment there was an additional reference to a MatEd Module "Harness of Brass: Effect of Rolling and Annealing." I found and read that as well. Most all of that was way beyond my headlights. However, there is one particularly interesting graph that shows the annealing process starts most pronounced at the range of 700-800 degrees F. That's probably why the other stuff I've read seemed confusing. Some say the target temp is 700, others say 800F. Seems like once the process starts it progresses rapidly at that temp range. That's why some way use 650 Templac and others say use 750?!?
In my experimenting with 650 Tempilac in 500C salt bath, the Tempilac demonstrated the color change at 4 seconds. I'm betting if I had 750 degree Tempilac the color change would be at 5 seconds, and I would be right in the sweet spot I'm looking for.
Others far smarter than I have already figured this out. The brass looks beautiful once annealed. Just like the brand new Lapua I started with.
My vote is 5 seconds neck/shoulder immersion in 500C salt bath.
Thanks for all your help and comments.