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Lube Inside Case Mouth

Seems to me that if this was such a problem we would all be treating the inside of the neck with something when we load absolutely virgin brass. Anybody have this problem with new brass?

With new brass I dip the necks into Redding Imperial Dry neck Lube (small black tub with graphite coated ceramic balls) then expand the necks and leave the lube inside the necks to assist bullet seating.
 
To me it looks as if that federal case has been cleaned after it was fired and seperated or cleaned before it was fired.... either way there is a patch on the shoulder of that case that tells me it wasnt all nice and even patena. It may have had a bad case of verdigri that was removed with brasso for all we know.
 
I occasionally tumble brass in my STM SS pin tumbler. I always tumble my 458 SOCOM brass because its filthy. IMO, the trick to pin tumbling is to avoid tumbling too long. Brass gets clean pretty quick in a pin tumbler. Tumbling too long WILL remove all the carbon from the necks and will tend to peen the case mouth slightly. Tumbling for 45min-1hr is plenty. It leaves most of the carbon in the neck while still getting the cases clean on the inside and outside. Case necks should be lightly chamfered after you're done.
 
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http://benchrest.com/showthread.php?58344-Dezincification-of-Brass-Liquid-cleaners

Neck separations in 2009 with Remanufactured LC brass, from Black Hills. The BH original ammo shot great, no issues. Great ammo.

BH, LC brass was fired, reloaded & stored.

At the time, the vinegar was thought to be the cause.

After many years, its simply over working of the brass when reloading that causes the problem.IMO.

Note that a donut comes with some new 223/5.56 brass. Hard to pull the expander out of the lubed necks.

I now have a fl die with a honed neck. Or i neck turn & use a factory fl die. Neck separations have stopped.

Note that vinegar has turned the LC brass brown.

223LC86Brittle_002.JPG
 
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You are shooting an AR suppressed... it doesn't get much dirtier. Some of us elect to use an adjustable gas block not just to improve the performance, but also to limit the amount of dirty gas cycled back into the receiver. Honestly, I can't tell how much this helps... everything is still filthy :)

Steel pin tumbling is the only way to truly clean these cases. As to the concerns about carbon in the neck as a lubricant or as a binding agent - remove the carbon and replace it with something else.

There is a world of difference doing precision loading and doing bulk. The volume is a PITA and performing any case prep step a couple of thousand times isn't efficient. I like to find simple answers that are easy and repeatable... Why... because I have done the Q-Tip thing before. You are making "Bulk" ammo for AR15 so Minute of Man or even 1MOA is an acceptable goal.

If "Squeaky" Clean is a concern or perceived negative then the simple answer is add a step to your case prep process. After steel pin tumbling, drop the cases in a vibrating tumbler with media (walnut shell, corn cob or whatever) with some carnauba wax. Now your cases are will stay shiny, but not "squeaky" clean. Or use Honady OneShot and don't wipe it off. After all... it is an AR15 and won't notice the difference :) If you continue to have concerns then buy second rifle as backup.
 
Dont believe everything you read. Take a reloaded round from years ago and try to seat it deeper. I always have a couple extra loaded rounds left after i finish a match and they sit around for years sometimes. Ive broke necks trying to pull bullets that are seated on carbon. If you do get one loose you can see the galvanic corrosion left from the carbon next to the copper
You probably forgot more than I know since I'm just a average varmint hunter. This issue of "cold welding" has always puzzled me. This is serious question, not an attempt to be cute. I apologize in advance for high jacking the thread but this is an opportunity to ask this question from someone who is more knowledgeable than me and perhaps learn.

The science is there I suppose regarding the galvanic action you described. And the noticeable resistance to seating a bullet deeper for rounds that have sat for some time is real. I don't dispute that.

Here's my dilemma. I have several very accurate varmint rifles that I often rotate from one season to other because I like to try different rifles. I often have rounds remaining that carry over from one season to the next rotation season, about 24 months so. I have never noticed any performance change in these reloads that have sat that long. Also, I often bulk load in the winter for the upcoming spring / summer varmint season so rounds remain seated for several months before use. Again, no performance changes. Let me qualify performance: basically I'm in the + or - approximate 1/2 moa range for my precision varmint rifles

So my question is this, does the "cold welding" produce measurable performance changes at this level of precision?

Also, what about cold welding effect on factory ammo in which the self life can vary significantly? I 've seen amazing groups shot at the range with premium factory ammo.
 
I wet tumble for 20 minutes only with pins after drying I then seat primers then swab all the necks with one shot on a q-tip and let dry. While the necks are drying I’ll take all the bullets that I’m going to load for the match put them in a zip lock bag and coat them a couple of times with one shot and tumble them around between coatings and let dry for a couple of minutes then charge and seat bullets, they go in nice and smooth and now there is lube between the copper and the brass. The one shot drys quick and will not harm the powder.
 
You probably forgot more than I know since I'm just a average varmint hunter. This issue of "cold welding" has always puzzled me. This is serious question, not an attempt to be cute. I apologize in advance for high jacking the thread but this is an opportunity to ask this question from someone who is more knowledgeable than me and perhaps learn.

The science is there I suppose regarding the galvanic action you described. And the noticeable resistance to seating a bullet deeper for rounds that have sat for some time is real. I don't dispute that.

Here's my dilemma. I have several very accurate varmint rifles that I often rotate from one season to other because I like to try different rifles. I often have rounds remaining that carry over from one season to the next rotation season, about 24 months so. I have never noticed any performance change in these reloads that have sat that long. Also, I often bulk load in the winter for the upcoming spring / summer varmint season so rounds remain seated for several months before use. Again, no performance changes. Let me qualify performance: basically I'm in the + or - approximate 1/2 moa range for my precision varmint rifles

So my question is this, does the "cold welding" produce measurable performance changes at this level of precision?

Also, what about cold welding effect on factory ammo in which the self life can vary significantly? I 've seen amazing groups shot at the range with premium factory ammo.
Factory rounds do not have carbon in them and i doubt a couple seasons on your varmint rounds will corrode em much. Lots of people that are going to preload a while before a match seat long then seat to the right depth before the match. They do this because of that inconsistent pop and most dont realize why they do it they just know they like carbon in the necks and know they need to reseat to final depth right before the match.
 
I've never had a need to tumble brass before. Never had dirty cases really - just use a little steel wool around the shoulder cleans them up fine. Now that I'm playing with suppressed ARs, the brass is very dirty and I think I should tumble it. I plan on using the FART.

I've heard that tumbling removes the carbon from inside the case mouth and can lead to bullets fusing to the brass. My buddy had this happened with his 300 RUM and it ripped the brass off below the shoulder when he tried to pull the bullet after noticing the problem.

What is the remedy for this? Case lube seems to be the answer. But people also say to tumble the brass to remove the lube because it shouldn't go in your chamber. Tumbling after the cartridge is completely loaded doesn't seem right to me.....

I'm loading a few thousand 5.56 rounds and I don't really want to play with putting carbon lube into every case mouth.

These cartridges will be stored for possibly decades before shooting.

Suggestions?

Thanks!
I was in the Army 1964-66. In training we always shot the oldest ammo stored on post. We were shooting ammo dated around the time of the Korean War. It never was a problem. Does the military load bullets into cases as they come out of production? Why would you load 1000s of rounds you don't intend to shoot in the next 10-20 years. Are you a survivalist loading up for zombie or alien protection? If we end up in a war like Ukraine is having a rifle will only protect you for a limited time. Eventually you run out of food, water and a warm place to live.
 
I was in the Army 1964-66. In training we always shot the oldest ammo stored on post. We were shooting ammo dated around the time of the Korean War. It never was a problem. Does the military load bullets into cases as they come out of production? Why would you load 1000s of rounds you don't intend to shoot in the next 10-20 years. Are you a survivalist loading up for zombie or alien protection? If we end up in a war like Ukraine is having a rifle will only protect you for a limited time. Eventually you run out of food, water and a warm place to live.
200rds is more than enough. If you use those surely you can pick up more from your work. If not they get yours. Most important thing is to get water and food stored. Im a fan of heaven’s harvest. Gotta be aware if your food is freezr dried or just dehydrated and its shelf life
 
Does the military load bullets into cases as they come out of production?
Hernon Bullet Proof 650 is environmentally safe Asphalt, water based ammunition waterproofing sealant. Formulated to waterproof and seal the interface between a bullet and cartridge. Bullet Proof 650 is formulated for internal coating and sealing of small, medium and large caliber ammunition. On the larger caliber ammunition the sealant is used to coat the inside of the shells as a barrier coating to prevent the reaction of the cartridge and the ignition powder. Hernon’s Bullet Proof 650 is approved on the US Army TDP for small caliber ammunition.
 
Hernon Bullet Proof 650 is environmentally safe Asphalt, water based ammunition waterproofing sealant. Formulated to waterproof and seal the interface between a bullet and cartridge. Bullet Proof 650 is formulated for internal coating and sealing of small, medium and large caliber ammunition. On the larger caliber ammunition the sealant is used to coat the inside of the shells as a barrier coating to prevent the reaction of the cartridge and the ignition powder. Hernon’s Bullet Proof 650 is approved on the US Army TDP for small caliber ammunition.
You wouldnt believe the pop those asphalt sealed rounds have when seating them deeper to pull the bullets.
 
I used to use Lyman Motor Mica dry neck lube until I went back to tumbling with corncob. Stainless steel pin tumbling is best for super dirty range pickup brass.

About loaded ammo with some age to it,.. I have 50 year old Chinese Surplus 7.62x39... also have 41 year old Czechoslovakian 7.62x39,.. Romanian and Russian too. Tens of thousands rounds shot,.. Every single round went BANG and never split anywhere. The Chinese rounds from the early 70's are hotter than the others.
 
Factory rounds do not have carbon in them and i doubt a couple seasons on your varmint rounds will corrode em much. Lots of people that are going to preload a while before a match seat long then seat to the right depth before the match. They do this because of that inconsistent pop and most dont realize why they do it they just know they like carbon in the necks and know they need to reseat to final depth right before the match.
Thanks for the explanation.
 
I used to use Lyman Motor Mica dry neck lube until I went back to tumbling with corncob. Stainless steel pin tumbling is best for super dirty range pickup brass.

About loaded ammo with some age to it,.. I have 50 year old Chinese Surplus 7.62x39... also have 41 year old Czechoslovakian 7.62x39,.. Romanian and Russian too. Tens of thousands rounds shot,.. Every single round went BANG and never split anywhere. The Chinese rounds from the early 70's are hotter than the others.
You reckon you could tell if any had inconsistent release pressures?
 
You reckon you could tell if any had inconsistent release pressures?
If you're asking about the 762x39 surplus ammo, of course i have no idea about release pressures, but they all work as expected. I sure as hell don't use surplus ammo in precision rifles :D
Pretty much 99 % of shooting I do with surplus ammo is with surplus rifles with open sights or peep sights at 300 meters shooting steel.
 
If you're asking about the 762x39 surplus ammo, of course i have no idea about release pressures, but they all work as expected. I sure as hell don't use surplus ammo in precision rifles :D
Pretty much 99 % of shooting I do with surplus ammo is with surplus rifles with open sights or peep sights at 300 meters shooting steel.
Ammo loaded for long periods of time work very well for this application
 
I have been pulling down milsurp "greek" .303. some of it is in poor condition Wet powder, corroded brass. I have not had to resort to pushing the projectile in further to break the seal. It has the bitumen mentioned above.
I have been re purposing the projectile and the powder, putting aside any too far gone.

My puller is an old herters one and works very well. I love to shoot the old "three oh" With good reloads ( like Siera 174 BTHP's ) I can get inside the 5 ring at 600 yds. Thats 2 MOA wide, but I am happy with that from a 100 year old rifle and open sights.
I find the flat base original stuff to be not quite as accurate at distance.

Some of the original greek manufacture ammo of 1969 - 73 era does show a variation in velocity and impact some by 150 fps shot to shot
 
Moly your bullets or swab inside of your necks with Dry Moly lube. Watched a video from Lou Murdica, on here. He swabbed the inside of the necks with dry moly before seating his bullet.
I like the moly approach and you can really see the difference in psi bullet seating. May I suggest that you make a solution of moly and 91% or stronger IPA (alcohol). This seems to be a more efficient method and involves less waste of the moly, which ain't cheap. Remarkable difference in psi seating.
 

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