I find with my magnum rifles the primer pockets get loose first. After 6+ firings in my 300prc I end up tossing a few here and there if the old primers pop out too easy when de priming.
fix em
Find the correct size easy out for your brass ahead of time or buy new…Other than primer pocket size and obvious visual defects, what are you looking for to make your use/pitch decision? Do you try to measure case thickness? I am new to reloading and have 8-12 shots through most of my cases but I am worried about taking it too far.
For decades I never annealed as I had few to none case neck splits .308 win.Is the time and money invested into annealing a good return in life of brass? Or have you found that it gives a good increase in precision?
Is the time and money invested into annealing a good return in life of brass? Or have you found that it gives a good increase in precision?
I agree with everyone here. Load until the case no longer functions how it should...but some things can sneak up on you. I notice that it becomes harder to set back the shoulder while resizing the brass after 3 or 4 reloads. It's like the metal isn't as flexible anymore (which it isn't). My resizing die is set up to set back the shoulder 3-4 thousandths (reloading for an AR), but it rebounds back to only 1-2 thousandths...sometimes less. This has caused feeding issues and precision inconsistencies. I can still get the brass set to where I need it to be, but it requires me adjusting my resizing die. I accidently mixed up some older brass with newer brass, and it became a huge pain in the butt. I just got myself an annealer. While I am still very new to annealing, it has seemed to fix my problem. As long as I anneal every 2 reloads, I no longer run into inconsistencies with my resizing die. Right now I'm on 7-8 reloads on my factory Hornady 6mm ARC brass and they are still working great...especially now with the annealer.