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Some individuals attempt wet tumble projo's encased in pill bottles in a vibratory tumbler.
It's a peening process not a plating process!
Yes, and some of us do it in an inexpensive rotary rock tumbler. No offense, but your dry method strikes me as both tedious and potentially messy. Plus, it requires quite a bit of dedicated equipment. I think the "wet" method is the only way to go. Here's how I do it.
I de-grease 100 or 150 (depending on caliber) raw bullets in a bucket along with a spritz of Simple Green, but I imagine any de-greasing process will work as well. I swish them around for a few seconds. Then dump in a tea kettle of boiling water and swish around for a few more seconds after which I wash off the cleaner with fresh water.
Rather than contaminate my Harbor Freight (or any other) rotary tumbling canisters, I use an applesauce jug. It's plastic with a round profile near the top and bottom but with a hand grip molded into the middle, so it tumbles brass or bullets quite well. It also has a wide mouth and, if you like eating applesauce, it's free.
I put the bullets in the jar along with a small amount of moly powder; about the amount which will fit on a medium flat blade screwdriver......... 1/8 tsp?. Then I add the saved "juice" from my last process which I store in an empty 1lb powder jug. It just covers the bullets. No BBs or anything else except the bullets, moly powder, and tap water.
I tumble for 90 minutes and then strain the used moly slurry back into the powder jug using a tea strainer. The bullets go into a sieve or colander and get a short fresh water rinse. Of course, all this is best done in a utility sink. The black "juice" is pretty horrible, but easily manageable if you work near a sink, especially one with a kitchen style spray nozzle. There is no dust and all the mess is easily washed down the drain. The only dedicated moly-specific equipment is the apple sauce tumbling jug and the "juice" storage jug; both were free.
The rinsed bullets go into a baking pan lined with several layers of paper towels. I shake them back and forth to dry and polish them. Hardly any moly comes off because any excess has already been washed down the drain.
Next I exchange the wet paper towels for a couple layers of fresh dry ones and give the bullets a blast with a heat gun for one minute as I shake the pan to roll the bullets around. This will drive tiny droplets out of the hollow point as evidenced by tiny black dots on the paper towel. I let the bullets cool and then hit them with the heat gun again to be sure they're completely dry.
At this point the bullets are dry and shiny and ready to load. The coating is perfect and will not rub off or contaminate your fingers. It's important to realize that it's unnecessary to individually handle any of these bullets except to examine one or two under high magnification so you can admire your handy work and complement yourself on a new batch of flawlessly coated bullets. Each one is perfect and no hand polishing is required. This is not always true with some "dry coated" moly bullets I've seen some of my fellow competitors make.
I feel so strongly about the "wet method" that if someone told me I could only moly coat using the "dry" method, I would stop using moly bullets.