Jerry, that Bench Source automatic case neck annealing machine sure is nice but at $529.99US plus shipping it has a hell of a price tag. I even wonder if it can be still shipped out of the USA, I know that the Giraud Cartridge Case Annealer cannot and they make it very clear on the web page, "Due to ITAR regulations of automated loading equipment, this device is not available for international sale. DO NOT ASK IF YOU ARE OUTSIDE THE USA."
Bench Soure is available and I can supply. The unit IS expensive but put in perspective a great investment. And when you get it set up, it is really fast to use and so consistent.
For my competition 308 shooting, I figure each bang is around $1.50/1.75 when you include all costs.
When you are consuming somewhere in the 4000rds for practise and match shooting per year. Doesn't take long to pay back a tool that will keep your key component going strong AND helping to provide the best accuracy you can.
It was a simplier investment to justify given my experience with manual annealing. It is a tool I can use for all my shooting for the rest of my career... dirt cheap overall.
The digi scale I got a couple of years ago was a tougher call given that some lesser units were working. BUT now that I have it, what a joy.... Same thing, pricey to buy, fantastic results that builds confidence, wonderful results on target.
For me, missing is very expensive.
For those that doubt the benefits of annealing, consider that some competition shooters will use the same batch of brass over a barrel or two or more.
When I switched to PRVI brass ($60/100 and I have ALOT of brass), I beat the CR@P out of a small batch. With moderate pressure loads, I stopped when I got to 20 firings with no splits, loose primers or damaged cases. I annealed them every 3 to 4 firings. Outside neck turn every firing.
And the PRVI needed a very different schedule then the Win I had shot for years before. NO, it was not just peak temp reached.
Do not recommend using brass with that much wear and tear for anything critical but it shows what proper care can do to help brass last a long time.
Jerry