I’m a Viking Death Metal and such kinda guy when I’m reloading. You know Black Sabbath, Amon Amarth, Behemoth, Slayer and Slipknot etc. What’s funny is my dad who would be well over a 100 today if he was still alive liked metal bands 40+ years ago. To each his own!After 40 some odd years of doing this I can honestly say the music playing during makes the time go by better but still doesn't improve the group size. Even tried Beethoven, the 5th seems so perfect to me, so trancendental, so relaxing, so enabling to the flow of things. But then again so does Mahavishnu Orchestra. YMMV
I listen to a lot of classical while do my brass prep. But . . . Blue Man Group keeps me moving along to the beat.After 40 some odd years of doing this I can honestly say the music playing during makes the time go by better but still doesn't improve the group size. Even tried Beethoven, the 5th seems so perfect to me, so trancendental, so relaxing, so enabling to the flow of things. But then again so does Mahavishnu Orchestra. YMMV
I clean the primer pockets, never removing any brass.
Otherwise same as you and I’ll add I NEVER drill a flash hole
turn it up!I listen to a lot of classical while do my brass prep. But . . . Blue Man Group keeps me moving along to the beat.![]()
switch to rice, no more dust or residue, thank me laterBoots Obermeyer used to have section on his company’s website that had notes about various things related to barrels and such. One thing that I do after the final tumbling (walnut shell blasting media) is to use compressed air and blow out the dust still in the brass case. He said that the dust residue caused excessive wear on the barrel. And recommend blowing out the brass. It’s not really a pain to do, it goes quite quickly. That’s my quirk and sticking with it for the last 25 years.
One of my current shooting buddies turned 95 this year. A few weeks ago while at the range he asked me if I had a cleaning rod in my pickup. I said sure and got it for him. He said he forgot to put powder in the case and stuck the bullet in the throat. He uses moly coated bullets and was able to tap the bullet out. I figure that's okay when you're still reloading and shooting at 95.I'm very OCD when it come to my brass prep. . . and I don't shoot competitively. Every case has to be as uniform (perfect) as I can make it.
Once in a great while I'll have to leave my reloading table due to some interruption and when at the shooting range I find I missed putting powder in a case.I blame it on my advanced age.
But, when that happens, I do find out if how well I'm pulling the trigger or not.
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When i started reloading the very first case I resized I got stuck in the die, and I have stuck many since then. I cussed and swore at every case lube I ever tried and thought they all were junk. Then one day a realized that about 95% of them were with one set of 223 small base dies. I took a sized case and drilled the primer hole and tapped it for a 1/4-20 bolt that i chucked up in my drill and coated it with valve grinding compound and ran it in my 223 dies for about 20 seconds. I kissed and made up with Hornaday one shot and ordered the biggest can they make, and have not stuck a case since. The very first case I sized I was reloading from verbal instructions no one mentioned that you need case lube, so that one is on me. I am still like dynamite with short fuse when I have to size 223 cases.