Thank you for the video review it was useful. I hope some of the comments haven't put you off. I did notice that cartridges five and six generated a strong orange flame indicating some alloy being burned off. The others seemed fine. Perhaps the torch got hotter when the tray was lifted allowing more propane through?
Thanks for the comment, what is wrong in your opinion? These were brand new brass, and I was making a demo video for the annealer. Hopefully you can teach me something. I'm always willing to learn
@@slamminhawgs9847 I didn't see any reply so I will tell you how I have annealed my cases for over 30 years, in regards to heating the case. I like to have my room dark enough when I start and I keep back several pieces of old brass that might be cracked or split around mouth of the case neck and set my torch heat and annealing machine speed so that the bottom part of the neck and top of the case at the first part of the angle going from the case to the neck turns red just as it starts dropping out from the machine. I never over anneal the mouth of the case neck like is done in this video because it will start premature splitting of the cases mouth.
"a standard plug you get from Amazon"? First of all, it's called a power supply. The "plug" is just the end part that plugs into the device being powered. But what's the voltage?? That's an important detail. The MOST important in fact. Or is this a magical "standard plug" that just magically knows what voltage every device requires and automatically spits out the appropriate one?
What gas are you using for this? Great video btw.
@@SA-hh9mv thanks just using propane for this video
@@slamminhawgs9847 Good to know! Thanks for sharing!
@@SA-hh9mv you are welcome, thanks for watching and asking!
Thank you for the video review it was useful.
I hope some of the comments haven't put you off.
I did notice that cartridges five and six generated a strong orange flame indicating some alloy being burned off. The others seemed fine. Perhaps the torch got hotter when the tray was lifted allowing more propane through?
Thanks for the comment, I don't let too much bother me.
Thank you for the review, I am pleased that you like it 🙂
It's an awesome machine!!!
Its been 2 years since you posted video, are you still liking this machine, and how is it holding up?
@@ef2967 still working same as brand new! I switch between it and the annealeez. You can’t go wrong with either really
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What torch head did u buy?
Thanks
I believe it was a pencil tip torch head from Home Depot
Thanks
@@carlhazelton1077 you are welcome!
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I certainly hope you don't call those cases properly annealed!
Thanks for the comment, what is wrong in your opinion? These were brand new brass, and I was making a demo video for the annealer. Hopefully you can teach me something. I'm always willing to learn
@@slamminhawgs9847 I didn't see any reply so I will tell you how I have annealed my cases for over 30 years, in regards to heating the case. I like to have my room dark enough when I start and I keep back several pieces of old brass that might be cracked or split around mouth of the case neck and set my torch heat and annealing machine speed so that the bottom part of the neck and top of the case at the first part of the angle going from the case to the neck turns red just as it starts dropping out from the machine. I never over anneal the mouth of the case neck like is done in this video because it will start premature splitting of the cases mouth.
@@fisherus thanks for your reply! I appreciate it
@@fisherus fudd detected
"a standard plug you get from Amazon"? First of all, it's called a power supply. The "plug" is just the end part that plugs into the device being powered. But what's the voltage?? That's an important detail. The MOST important in fact. Or is this a magical "standard plug" that just magically knows what voltage every device requires and automatically spits out the appropriate one?
sorry to not meet your expectations, i would suggest reaching out to the manufacturer for proper specs