I looked extensively and couldn't find Tempilaq in Canada, but I was able to find something similar - Omegalaq. You may be able to fibd Tempilaq at Amazon. If you do, compare the cost + shipping with respect to Omegalaq.
I do mine in low light conditions, with a dewalt drill and socket along with a torch. Just get the neck to start to "glow" or watch the "blue" appear. The blue will creep down to the neck and thats it. I do not quench the casings that can lead to a "too" soft of an annealing. I drop them into an old ammo can and then the next day dtart reloading.
I agree with Eagleye, a glowing red neck in good light conditions is way too hot.
federal, and remmy. So is the brass trash?
Quenching brass does not harden or soften it from what I have read, I have been air coolin mine.
Potassium Nitrate in your lead pot is the way to go for annealing your brass.
From what I've read the surface temp needs to hit about 700-750 for a very short time in order to anneal the full thickness of the neck brass.
If you can do something that heats slower than a flame, then I think you're gunning for about 4-450.
Someone can correct me if I'm wrong, but that's how I imagine it
-J.



























