oldfortyfiveauto
Well-Known Member
- Joined
- Jan 20, 2011
- Messages
- 408
There's also Annie: https://fluxeon.com/product/annie-induction-annealer/
I don't understand your logic about the Annie Annealer burning up brass and being dangerous?? The Annie is an induction just like the Amp is, but half the cost. I don't own either one so just not understanding how it is dangerous versus a flame method or salt bath method.
You sure can. Use tempilaq on the outside. proper annealing temp for case necks is a range and 750 is in the middle of that range. Once you find the time it takes to blacken it, you know the time for that type of brass. What do you think the AMP does? it tests ONE case to determine it's heating potential and then uses that same time for all cases there after. So theoretically, it is doing the same thing the annie is doing but using a computer to analyze the initial time versus a person using tempilaq. consistency is the name of the game, assuming you do not overheat the case. Again, you could even use several stripes of tempilaq, one at 700, one at 750, and one at 800.You then test say three cases and see the time it takes to get to 750 without going to 800. The annie goes by tenths of a second which is more than fine enough adjustment to keep you under 800 and over 700.You can not adequately control the temperature, if you over heat it, you making it too soft IMHO
See my comment aboveAMP brings precision and consistency to the table, they spend $$$ to come up with the timing for each casing.
Induction technology is not new, its been around for decades, anyone with a bit of electronic knowledge can make an induction annealer, getting the right timing based on brass composition is another story.
Is the AMP a great tool? Yes. Is the AMP overpriced? Of course it is. I can buy a darn high-end induction stove for about the same price ...
This is the outcome of a single option, they can charge whatever and people will pay.