Throttle_monkey1
CGN Ultra frequent flyer
To geek out a bit...
Assuming the mild (low carbon) steel used in a casing, the affect of annealing will depend on the annealing temperature and the quenching method. High temperature annealing followed by a fast quench will result in a harder metal, than a low temperature annealing and/or a slow quench.
Heating steel causes the metal grains/crystals to grow (the longer the annealing the larger the grains). A high temperature anneal followed by a fast quench could (depending on how hot) result in the grains reforming into a smaller size, hardening the metal. A low temperature anneal over a long time, followed by a fast quench would freeze the large grains, resulting in a softer metal.
Note that the story gets more complicated for higher carbon steels, and even more-so when other alloying materials come into play.
Geek off.
If you quench your steel after heating to above the austenitizing temperature that is not annealing. Annealing is extremely slow cooling.