Don't like taking carbon out of my necks so I've stopped with the pins. Walnut and some mineral spirits...nice clean brass.
Hey guys,
I'm kicking around the idea of getting into wet tumbling with stainless steel pins. Been watching some videos and love the looks of the brass when it comes out. I've tumbled with corn cob media as well as walnut. I primarily use walnut for my .223 because it doesnt get stuck in the cases like the corn cob does. I've never had results like I've seen with wet tumbling, no matter how much polish I add or how long I tumble the brass.
What I'm wondering, is if I do go to wet tumbling, is there any reason to keep my dry tumbling equipment? I have a vibratory tumbler with a RCBS rotary sifter. I would be looking to purchase a new wet tumbler, and a new sifter, as well as a case dryer.
LC
I just use a heat gun on mine lay them out on a towel blow them inside and out three minutes and 100 cases are dry
Is the redding imperial neck lube with application media considered graphite? Is that a good way to go? I'm a Hornady One-Shot user and that's the only way I've ever lubed cases for resizing.
Opening the container of Dry Lub is like opening a can of anti sieze. By the time I’m done loading its in and on everything.
What I'm wondering, is if I do go to wet tumbling, is there any reason to keep my dry tumbling equipment? I have a vibratory tumbler with a RCBS rotary sifter. I would be looking to purchase a new wet tumbler, and a new sifter, as well as a case dryer.
I do not experience carbon in necks.
I blow all my cases out with compressed airThere is a lot of misinformation out there regarding this method. I have done it this way since 2014 and have not used my dry vibratory set up since. The biggest issue is what happens to your rifle barrel if you don't get all the pins out.
If you are the type of person that don't mind taking the time to do some extra quality control checks I'd say give it a try. I do a visual inspection of every case for pins. This is a pain, but I haven't ruined a barrel yet.
I definitely don't believe there is any shooting related advantage to having spotless brass. It's pretty, but it wont help your groups. You can sometimes see cracks or bad spots that could lead to trouble later. If you buy new cases and are careful you probably don't need this method.
I have read a lot of stuff about it dimensionally changing brass. I have not been able to get mine to do this. I also cant get my set up to peen the case mouth to the point it is damaged...or even visibly changed at all. Same with loosening primer pockets. Some folks might have this problem, but I haven't in 6 years.
So, why do I do it??? Well, I get 223, 9mm, 40S&W and 45acp but the 5 gallon buckets from a military shooting range. I sell what I don't use, which is 95 percent of it and pretty sells.
I blow all my cases out with compressed air
View attachment 1166507 How much cleaner do they have to be? These were done in 6 hours with the Lyman green media.
I switched to wet tumbling +10 years ago. It is very effective/efficient and can clean 5x-10x amount of brass in same amount of time. However, to achieve this type of volume it is a production run that is continuous as one batch is being tumbled you are prepping or processing other batches.
The reason I decided to switch was that I was shooting high volume (several thousand rounds per month) and also shooting suppressed. If you are shooting high volume, dirty guns (AR15), suppressed, or picking up range brass. I don't bother turning on the tumbler until I have at least a tub (large shoe box size) of dirty cases, which is equivalent of 1K of dirty rifle cartridges or +2K of pistol brass. Most pistol brass and rifle brass is clean within 25 minutes, and suppressed brass (black with soot) takes another 30-40 minutes. After rinsing thoroughly (water is clear) I use one of the spinning separators (clam shell type) to spin out the steel pins and also throw off some of the water. Dump the clean brass on a beach towel and roll it around for 30 seconds to remove excess water on exterior of case. Either place outside on sunny day or on floor under a ceiling fan for a day or two. Presto!
There is no reason to switch from vibrating to wet tumbling if you are shooting low volume, especially through a bolt gun where the spent cases are still extremely clean. If you are shooting precision bench rest then there some concern that the steel pins ding the lip of case mouth. If you aren't neck turning, case weighing, and hand polishing cases (OCD level of Case Pep) then this potential issue is a non-event for you... 95% of reloaders won't even notice or be concerned.