I have a wet tumbler that I have used with very good results on pistol brass that I had shot and saved over the years, actually amazing.
So, now that I'm an expert brass cleaner, I decided to try the range brass test just to see, and what a failure.
This was just a test for cleaning so I picked up about 150 .223/5.56 cases around our hunting club shooting bench, no idea how long some of it had been exposed to the elements. After cleaning, about 2/3 of the cases were pink and about 1/3 looked really good.
After doing some internet digging, it seems the consensus is that too much Lemishine is the culprit, that it removes something from the brass (according to all of the metallurgist and chemical engineers). Not to worry some say, just toss them into the dry tumbler, they will come out good as new. Nope.
No, no, no, put them back in the wet tumbler with less Lemishine is the trick, and out of desperation to prove my brass cleaning skill I did this with no thought, like I could tumble something back into the brass. Nope, still pink, but...
Why are some cases really nice and shiny, like we like it, but others are pink? If it were a chemical reaction from the Lemishine it looks like they all would be pink and I have cleaned other batches of brass with the same amount of Lemishine with a good results. I ASS-U-ME the length of time that they were expose to the elements is a factor, they were all brown and yucky when I picked them up.
This is more a matter of curiosity at this point, has anyone else had this happen? Opinions, experiences, scientific data, and facetious comments are all welcome.
So, now that I'm an expert brass cleaner, I decided to try the range brass test just to see, and what a failure.
This was just a test for cleaning so I picked up about 150 .223/5.56 cases around our hunting club shooting bench, no idea how long some of it had been exposed to the elements. After cleaning, about 2/3 of the cases were pink and about 1/3 looked really good.
After doing some internet digging, it seems the consensus is that too much Lemishine is the culprit, that it removes something from the brass (according to all of the metallurgist and chemical engineers). Not to worry some say, just toss them into the dry tumbler, they will come out good as new. Nope.
No, no, no, put them back in the wet tumbler with less Lemishine is the trick, and out of desperation to prove my brass cleaning skill I did this with no thought, like I could tumble something back into the brass. Nope, still pink, but...
Why are some cases really nice and shiny, like we like it, but others are pink? If it were a chemical reaction from the Lemishine it looks like they all would be pink and I have cleaned other batches of brass with the same amount of Lemishine with a good results. I ASS-U-ME the length of time that they were expose to the elements is a factor, they were all brown and yucky when I picked them up.
This is more a matter of curiosity at this point, has anyone else had this happen? Opinions, experiences, scientific data, and facetious comments are all welcome.