rwj
Gold $$ Contributor
Mixture of both… walnut for cleaning, corn cob for polishing… works even better when you mix in some Flitz.Question is.... corn cob or walnut and what if any polish / treatment?
Mixture of both… walnut for cleaning, corn cob for polishing… works even better when you mix in some Flitz.Question is.... corn cob or walnut and what if any polish / treatment?
I agree, the AMP is expensive, I went with if because I didn't want to mess with flame. It is a personal choice, and I wouldn't want to pressure you. A lot of reloading is just that, personal choice. We find what works for us and we go with it and we modify it to suit our needs. I put up in my profile that I shoot F Open to give people some idea of what I am doing, there are some that are casual shooters that don't go to some of the lengths we go to to shoot well. I am really still learning, just finished my 3rd year of Competition, I am not in the same League as the You Tube Shooters, I am just happy when I don't finish last. I seek to improve. I have tumbled since the beginning, I don't find it as messy as wet tumbling, I just dump and sift then I am ready for the next step.
I appreciate all the insights. I *may* not be going back to vibratory cleaning, now.
"Hi....my name is Mark....and I have a shiny brass addiction."![]()
Tumblea couple of key points in this thread. What you do, do after EVERY firing to maintain consistency.
What would cause cleaning with media do that? I may experiment for the spring matchesI shoot 1000 yd BR and simply wipe the neck/shoulder junction with 0000 steel wool before annealing with my AMP. The one time I did clean with media immediately proceeded my worst showing ever at a LR BR match.
What would cause cleaning with media do that? I may experiment for the spring matches
I use a can of air and a Pipe cleaner through the primer hole to get the media out.I think it was a small factor. But I hadn't been cleaning at all and had been placing well. Then I changed barrels and cleaned the cases with corn cob, and shot poorly.
As I was going through what I did wrong/different, one of the things was vibratory cleaning with corn cob. I am not at all convinced I got all the corn cob out of the cases.
Regardless, all is fixed now. A few quick twists of the case with 0000 steel wool cleans the neck and shoulder area nicely. And I have have shot my smallest groups ever......
I also use the BS every firing. Takes about 3-4 seconds per case. Its fast and easy.I have been using a Bench Source for 8 years or so. I do it after every firing, take 10 minutes for 100 or so cases. I've seen them used for 400ish.
yes, I blow them out too. scrub primer pocket, tumble in walnut and blow out with air. If I trim, I blow them out again. I can see the dust come out after tumble.I use a can of air and a Pipe cleaner through the primer hole to get the media out.
I use a can of air and a Pipe cleaner through the primer hole.
Not sure, I always clean the brass and my chamber to ensure the rounds feed smoothly. Plus with a clean case I can tell if something is wrong like a sooty neck. It's not scientific for sure. Do you have an example of why not too clean?Let me ask a couple of questions.
What advantages do you gain from cleaning your brass?
Is it possible that cleaning your brass could actually be detrimental to accuracy and consistency in reloading?
Bart
This ^^^ works awesome and seems to last forever!
Grunt,Not sure, I always clean the brass and my chamber to ensure the rounds feed smoothly. Plus with a clean case I can tell if something is wrong like a sooty neck. It's not scientific for sure. Do you have an example of why not too clean?
I''m looking at Bench-Source too. But its some $600.