Excellent unit. We have had one at work that has been used heavily for about 40 years, and the only service it needed was replacement shafts and probably a belt or two.Did you search under "rock tumblers"?
As a very old rockhound and doing lapidary work as a hobby , I've found that many of the "cheap" tumblers work as well as the very expensive ones and last quite a while too.
Maybe this might suit your criteria:
Rocks, Gemstones, Minerals, Rock Tumblers, Lapidary Equipment, and Educational Supplies For Sale - The Rock Shed
The Rock Shed features rock tumblers, polished rocks, minerals, spheres, gemstone beads, amber beads and gold specimens as well as crushed rocks, agate bookends and tumbling grit.www.therockshed.com
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I have been using the $39 Harbor Freight rock tumbler for a little over 5 years . Never had a problem. It will hold 50-70 6BR cases. The only problem is gettin the end cap on. With a little practice it is not a problem. I only tumbler a couple times a year. I would say it's not the one for cleaning a lot of cases every year. It should work for no more than 50 30-06 cases at a time.I’m sorry for the question that I’m certain has been probably beat to death but I searched and couldn't find a thread pertaining to the highest quality wet media tumbler for using the SS pins in. I want to give it a shot to clean up some older brass I use in a few of our hunting rifles and other than the cheap plastic tumblers I cant seem to find anything of higher quality meaning something that will last longer than a year before falling apart from cheap Chinese made junk. Are these the only options available now? A local friend has a heavy duty metal framed unit but it’s old and the stickers are long gone on it so we can’t figure out who made it. Any insight would be greatly appreciated...
Good suggestion! Thanks I never thought of that.Thumlers is good. I do very strongly suggest pulling the rubberish drum liner and painting the inside of the metal drum with a good rust resistant coating. Then again what's best depends on a variety of criteria. I started with the Thumlers and added a larger one from Frankford with accessory end caps as well as kept the Thumlers. As noted sometimes bigger is better - I have an ultrasonic cleaner big enough for a carbine upper but I can't say it's good for cleaning dies or moulds or jewelry - and often smaller is better.
Also use the Harbor Freight $39 rock tumble. Works great five years. Need to check if your PVC end cap will seal a HF drum.With the situation on primers and powder being what it is, this smaller, cheaper tumbler suits me just fine.