Ok thanks fellas lots of good info here. I almost didnt ask about this as i wasn't sure there would be any response. Anyway i tried the steel wool thing and it seemed to help a bit. I took pieces of 0000 steel wool and spun them onto a brass brush that was chucked in to my drill, then went to work. Like i said it helped but it didnt cure the stickiness completely. I am also a little concerned about how much material the steel wool is removing. I miked a few cases before i brushed and then after and there were a few 10ths difference after completion. I am thinking this is the crud but could it also be brass? probably not but i am not sure. I then had to put my expander ball back into my redding die and i ran the cases back and forth or rather up and down over the ball about a dozen times. this seemed to do the most good. After about 20 cases i started seeing little slivers of brass so i stopped doing this as i didnt want to tear up my die. I am most likly just going to throw this brass in the trash or use them for fowlers. I have zero confidence in this brass after all this even though they may be 100% fine. One thing about me, is if i dont like something 100% or if i have any doubts about something it will effect me mentally until i do something about it, and in this case, thats throwing the brass away. We will see. If they shoot ok ill keep them for fowlers and practice, if they dont they go to the big round recycling ben. I know we annealed the cases properly, that i am sure. One thing i will do differently next time is to anneal the brass before i FL size it and i will clean the necks some how to remove the crud before annealing. I think thats the two biggest reasons why i am experiencing these issues.
I did seat some bullets in to the brass i ran over the expander ball then removed the bullets to see if i was scaring the bullets and they were fine. I dont know were the little pieces of brass were coming from, but like i said, i dont want to scratch up my die so i am not going to do this any longer. I may run the brass over my 6.5mm expander tool then neck them back down and see what that does for them, but that will work the brass over pretty good, so there goes the hole reason for annealing in the first place. This dasher brass only had around 10 firings on them so i dont even know if they needed annealing to begin with! I wanted to buy one of those Bench source units but i think i will hold off for a while now, if ever. Ron H. does claim that annealing 30Br brass is a good idea and i love shooting my 30BR's so who knows what i will end up doing! Thanks for the help fellas. Lee