In my experience it does not.
However, I have read that brass is most accurate on it's first firing and gets less accurate after that. This was information I got from a long range precision target shooting forum though, so keep that in mind. Those guys get all ramped up about a 1" difference @ 1000 yds. If you are a typical hunter or shooter, you will likely never, ever notice.
Not everything you read in forums is accurateIf that were true, LR competitors would only use new brass.
I have worn out 3 barrels and working on wearing out a forth barrel with the same lot of brass. FL resize everytime, but only bump the shoulder back .002. Have never annealled a case in my life.
Don't tell too many long range competitors this, or I'll have to find someone else to buy good 1F .308 brass from on the cheap!![]()
I have worn out 3 barrels and working on wearing out a forth barrel with the same lot of brass. FL resize everytime, but only bump the shoulder back .002. Have never annealled a case in my life.
I just bought a set of full length sizing dies and I was wondering about annealing the brass and if it was an absolute necessity..Guess that answers my question.
I just bought a set of full length sizing dies and I was wondering about annealing the brass and if it was an absolute necessity..Guess that answers my question.
First time I've heard that, same lot too? Do you not trim and lose material (especially with non-custom FL sizing dies) ? What caliber do you shoot? So wearing out 3 barrels means you resized the same lot of brass how many times? 10, 20, 100? Interesting...



























