June 30, 2018, 06:03 AM | #1 |
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Work Hardening brass
While researching some things a question popped into my mind about work hardening brass.
Would it be possible to work harden brass by shot peening? If so is there a way to locallize the hardening, say to just the head/rim area? Or is it a matter of annealing the area you want soft again? I've heard from several sources that Lazzeroni cases have a "very hard head". I welcome any input into this matter. Std7mag
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June 30, 2018, 12:25 PM | #2 |
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If you read Hatcher's Notebook, he describes having the headstamp on some Frankford Arsenal cases struck extra deep to increase the hardness of the heads. He'd been having trouble with them blowing out before he could get to a pressure high enough to damage the Garand action. That worked and he finally was able to produce some cracks without the brass letting go first.
You do not need to reanneal. That would take you in the wrong direction and destroy hardness you might never get back again. Shot peening would probably affect the surface hardness of the brass, but I wouldn't expect anything to change appreciably deep inside from it unless you peened it so hard it was seriously distorted. You might be able to do something like roll the extractor groove a little deeper until the rifle barely closes on it, then firing to flatten the head back out. That should work it some. If you need extra hard heads for some reason, you might buy some foreign steel case ammunition and pull the bullets and work up a load with your powder and bullets for them, but you won't normally be able to reload them, as they then develop microcracks that leak gas and cut pits into a chamber.
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June 30, 2018, 01:11 PM | #3 |
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Work hardening is done by repeatedly moving the brass. Hammering it doesn't do that. Brass is hardened when it is heated and allowed to cool slowly. However, there's really no purpose to hardening case heads.
http://chestofbooks.com/crafts/machi...ing-Brass.html "...get to a pressure high enough to damage the Garand action..." JC did it (proving how strong the Rifle is) by loading increasingly higher pressure 'blue pill' loads. No special cases. He got to 120,000 PSI when one locking lug cracked. No damage to the receiver. No further damage to the Rifle. Took an 8mm Mauser round to do that.
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June 30, 2018, 01:41 PM | #4 |
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To make it clear, do not anneal the head of the case.
That has to remain hard or it will let go and then its an explosive gas release you do not want to be part of. Annealing for a re-loader is purely the neck and shoulder. You do not want that going down the case. Really bad things happen. Before we shoot it, the case is put through a series of process and that include the correct hardness for the base as well as the annelaed end. Some mfgs leave that on (Lapua) so you can see it. Its the last stage of case conditioning and only for the neck and shoulder (polishing to bright is an appearance thing not condition) . Most polish the anneal appearance off, they are annealed the same as Lapua, it just no longer shows, bright pretty at one time perceived good vs the less pretty anneal that is now something of a signature for Lapua though others leave as is as well. That ability to polish off is a signature that it is not over annealed.
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June 30, 2018, 08:31 PM | #5 |
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I know better than to anneal the head of the case.
The casing i'm looking to work with has a rather severe rebate to the rim. Others had reported case expansion at the base. Catching on the extractor. I'm looking to eliminate that.
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July 1, 2018, 11:06 AM | #6 | |
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F. Guffey |
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July 1, 2018, 11:16 AM | #7 | |
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F. Guffey |
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July 1, 2018, 11:21 AM | #8 |
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Yeah - Guffey - I'm with you there -
I anneal 9mm shells to swage into .40 JHP jackets and I purposefully allow them to air-cool after making the whole case cherry red to soften up the brass and remove any work-hardening in the brass. Quenching usually hardens. Not air-cooling. Hardening comes about when carbon becomes trapped in the matrix / crystaline structure of the metal by fast cooling - not slow cooling. |
July 1, 2018, 03:41 PM | #9 | ||
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Any annealing work with that area has to be totally restrictive. I can see why you suggested shot peening. sort of. Quote:
Annealing and hardening are two different things. So call me totally confused. It would help if you would describe the case and its issues or have a link.
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July 2, 2018, 01:58 PM | #10 |
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I'm essentially stuck with having to machine a piece of brass to make my casing. Extremely hard to find, and extremely expensive.
With the rebated rim,(the original casing was only using 40k psi) I'm looking to hopefully keep it from expanding into the extractor groove. I was thinking of shot peening my material first, machining, then annealing the neck/shoulder area to form them. My apologies for the confusion.
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July 3, 2018, 02:41 PM | #11 |
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Thank you, it begins to track.
Proverbial Rock and a hard case.
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July 3, 2018, 05:58 PM | #12 |
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Lol
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July 4, 2018, 12:43 AM | #13 |
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Quenching BRASS has no effect on hardness, it merely cools it, or in other words, STOPS the annealing process, which many do wrongly anyway.
BRASS can only be hardened by working it, which means moving it’s grain structure by stretching it, compressing it and pounding it. If you anneal to ANY red colour, cherry or dull red is often coined, you have essentially ‘burned’ the metal. Burnt in this instance means that you have broken the grain structure by CHANGING the chemistry of the brass by forcing molecules to ‘gas off’. The grain structure when properly aligned through annealing run parallel and have ‘gas’ adhesion, when hardened, the grain jumbles around and loses this gas adhesion. Burning the brass destroys the gas adhesion. If you anneal correctly, time and heat is spot on, just as the annealing temp OF THE BRASS is reached, an orange/pink flame occurs, or hue, is seen, this is the gas in the grain structure releasing, go beyond this point and you ruin the grain structure. Just as that point is reached and the case is removed from the heat, the gas resettles and annealing has taken place. If you quech at this time, as many do, it does not change the annealing that just occurred. In my job, I am required to anneal to certain conditions of the metal in question. I make copper, aluminium and brass element windings for helical type induction, if the anneal is wrong the metal will crack as it is wound, that is unacceptable in my industry. We manually anneal copper bar because you can SEE when it gasses off and sags, other metals are induction furnace heated, but checked by hand first for the correct temp. It is rare to get ANY type of hardness back from ‘burnt’ brass. Hope this helps. Cheers. |
July 4, 2018, 02:39 AM | #14 | ||
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July 4, 2018, 10:56 AM | #15 | ||
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Std7mag, You can buy brass with different tempers. Here's a list of temper designations. You can look up the hardness at Matweb.com. Search under Cartridge Brass or 260 Brass. You want the H08 temper to match what most .308 case heads have, but H06 may be OK for lower pressure. Turning will affect at least the surface hardness, and I don't know what turned case makers typically do about taking that into account, if anything. After you have it turned, you would anneal the mouth same as for any case.
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July 7, 2018, 08:55 AM | #16 |
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From the industral end of things, true shot peening *Can* case harden, but it's normally used to evenly stress the surface of steel.
Shot peening of cast iron can go one of two ways, It can clean & even out the surface, very slightly case hardening, Or, it can stress nodular iron unevenly, setting you up for cracks. Depends entirely on the carbon introduced into the iron and/or the nickel content. It will compact & case harden aluminum. Shot peening aluminum will allow you to polish it to near chrome finish. Shot peening is used on bronze to surface harden it for bearing applications. I can't see how you could harden a cartridge case with standard shot peening equipment, and I don't think you would like the surface it leaves behind. |
July 8, 2018, 10:42 AM | #17 | |
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Remember, if you are using Federal cases look for big time case head expansions. I say that because there are so many reloaders that claim Federal case heads are soft. If the case head is soft someone should suspect a problem with the manufacturing process. Again, I found a bucket of 30/06 cases at a Iron and Metal salvage yard. The cases were not to be resold but no one informed the I&M operation. I fired the cases before I was advised not to use them. I thought the cases were magnificent cases. F. Guffey |
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July 8, 2018, 11:54 AM | #18 | |
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And if I was serious I would made a short die that that would support the case head. I understand the case would have to be pushed out of the die of the case head expanded. F. Guffey |
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July 9, 2018, 10:06 AM | #19 | |
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July 10, 2018, 04:11 AM | #20 |
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Alas i'm not working with casings that are already drawn at a factory, rather i would be machining a case from a piece of solid bar. Usually sold in 10ft lengths.
I would cut into workable lengths, and machine on a lathe. Would the cutting/shearing action of the lathe harden the brass? Annealing would take place at the mouth for forming the neck and shoulder with forming dies.
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July 10, 2018, 10:42 AM | #21 |
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In the process described above,
Where are you going to find suitable 'Cartridge Brass' alloy bar stock to start with? When I hand machined oddball Sharps cases I ran into the issue of alloy mixing, with common 'Brass' rod being way too hard to start with, and without the zinc alloy being correct the cases split. If you want to harden the head, you will have to machine the case blank, bore the bar stock, build a socket die to insert head into, and build an impact ram to fit I to the case. Using something like an air hammer you would be able to work harden the head area without hardening case walls. Then you would have to cut rim & primer pocket, this will require a mandrel inside the case to keep it from deforming as you clamp the case by the walls to cut the rim/primer pocket. Then you could get around to annealing the top of the case for neck/shoulder forming... Back before long stroke hydraulic presses were invented, manufacturers tried both casting case blanks and machining, and cutting billet into blanks (what you are talking about). Copper can be spun (rimfire) but brass has to be extruded/drawn and/or machined. Good luck. |
July 11, 2018, 08:50 AM | #22 |
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It's also cold-rolled to harden it. It's much more common to see 360 (aka 36000) brass (close to Muntz metal) in rod form and the full hard temper not quite as hard as you like, though it's only about 10% low. 260 (aka 26000 brass or cartridge brass) is also available in rod through aircraft metals suppliers, but you usually have to call and ask about it. The problem is that 260 is valued for it malleability, so it's usually soft unless rolled into sheets, so hard extruded rod can take some looking to find.
Std7Mag, what peak pressures are you looking to contain here?
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July 12, 2018, 04:20 AM | #23 |
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Would like to possibly be able to get to 58,000 psi. Hence like a 257 Roberts +P.
With the amount the rim is rebated i don't realistically see 62-65K in it's future. I'd kinda like to know what Lapua did to the 416 Rigby case to make it viable for the 338 Lapua. I had seen/heard of people machining down the 404 Jeffery case to get 425 WR, but i'm looking for somewhat higher pressure than 425 WR. Hence the removing of metal from a case that already has a set inside diameter and depth (profile?) seems counter productive to me.
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July 12, 2018, 08:36 AM | #24 | |
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You don't want heads that are extra soft for that. You could go with a thicker head, as another possibility, but most people don't like to give up powder space. If you didn't want to reload, you could go with turned mild steel cases. Normal pressure signs won't work with them, though, so you'd want to own a Pressure Trace or other pressure testing instrumentation.
Assuming you are using a standard head size, have you tried looking for basic brass that can be formed? Quote:
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July 12, 2018, 09:09 AM | #25 |
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I don't know if this helps you,but the Nosler magnums (or some of them) usea .404 Jeffery parent case
https://www.americanrifleman.org/art...the-30-nosler/ |
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