I just went on a binge, sizing and trimming hundreds of .308 and .30-'06 casings to get ready for spring when I won't have the time. I noticed half a dozen case necks splits in an old batch of WW .308 brass, reloaded perhaps 4-5 times. Why Winchester? I've always bought factory WW ammo for hunting and accumulated the brass over the years, augmented by a couple of bulk buys at a good price.
I've long annealed my 45-70 brass and .30-'06 brass for my M1, so I know the drill and got busy on all my .308 brass as well. Monotonous and time consuming, but now I'm good to go for several more reloading sessions.
There hadn't been much case stretching in either the '06 or .308, commercial and military, but it all got trimmed to the recommended trim length and then run through my RCBS case prep machine before annealing. Next the priming chore .....
How many of you anneal your brass? I know guys who don't, simply discarding any cases with spit necks. I'm not prepared to that after I've gone through the bother of sizing and trimming hundreds of cases.
I've long annealed my 45-70 brass and .30-'06 brass for my M1, so I know the drill and got busy on all my .308 brass as well. Monotonous and time consuming, but now I'm good to go for several more reloading sessions.
There hadn't been much case stretching in either the '06 or .308, commercial and military, but it all got trimmed to the recommended trim length and then run through my RCBS case prep machine before annealing. Next the priming chore .....
How many of you anneal your brass? I know guys who don't, simply discarding any cases with spit necks. I'm not prepared to that after I've gone through the bother of sizing and trimming hundreds of cases.


















































