If you look closer you will find virtually no credible published information on what temperature to use in the first place. Lots of claims and suggestions, from Hornady's 475F to people who want a visible glow (about 800C), but I challenge you to show me one source that actually has a strong arguement as to why the temperature they give is correct.
I agree, it is hard to find good information on the net, and it is getting worse. However after a little searching I found a Technical Data Sheet for C26000 brass, which is what is used for cartridge brass. There is one graph where they show how much a work hardened sample reduces in hardness in two minutes with various annealing temperatures. It shows brass with three different starting hardness values. If you take the hardest one at 150 HV as an example (see graph below), the way I read it is that if you anneal at 435C you will reduce the hardness to 110 in 2 minutes. The lower starting hardness samples reduce less.
They offer a correction factor rule of thumb for longer and shorter annealing times, and say "Temperatures at 1 minute annealing time will be 10 degrees higher". So you would need 445C in my example if you want to anneal in 1 minute. I suspect most do not want to anneal each case for 1 minute, and if we assume (not always a good thing to do) that each time you half the annealing time you need 10 degrees more temperature, that means you need 40 degrees more to anneal in 7.5 seconds, compared to 2 minutes. In the example I gave, that means you need 475C or 887 deg F to anneal in 7.5 seconds. The graph is included below for your analysis of what it means. Perhaps you will come up with different conclusions.
What I decided is that it is not a black and white issue. The time and temperature to anneal is based on how much the brass is work hardened, and to what hardness you want to get to. I have a feeling though that there are many reloaders that are simply wasting their time annealing because they are doing it at too low a temperature and for too short a time.
As for Hornady's 475 F, brass is never going to anneal at that temperature. They however are applying it down on the body, so must be counting on the neck being much hotter. How much? Sounds like a terribly imprecise method when you are measuring 475F and hoping the case is nearly 900F somewhere else. Visible glow in the dark is a much more accurate way of doing it, in my opinion.


















































