Look at the chemicals it contains. Too many have been led to believe it is a polish. It is neither a polish or a wax.please tell us why ?
Look at the chemicals it contains. Too many have been led to believe it is a polish. It is neither a polish or a wax.please tell us why ?
Look at the chemicals it contains. Too many have been led to believe it is a polish. It is neither a polish or a wax.
...I wipe cases (while still warm when Possible) with patch with a little aerosol Ballistol. That removes any dirt and gets carbon off the neck. Nylon brush in the neck a couple strokes -- you don't want to remove all the carbon...
has anyone on here who doesn't have ocd and has an experimental nature, taken a step back and tried it both ways to see what happens to your groups and es and stuff?
Ok, I’ve read that last sentence three times now and I’m still scratching my head!Most 'modern?' reloaders discover everything all by themselves, and during the process they rename everything.
I would suggest you go to the library to determine if they have R. Lee's book on modern reloading. I am one of the few that have the book, I have read the book, I do not agree with R. Lee on a number of things but he did cover case cleaning.
I tumble cases before sizing and I tumble cases to remove case lube. I do not want anything between the case and chamber but air; I do not want a lot of air, if there is dirt, grit and grime between the case and chamber when the air is blown out the dirt, grit and grime is leaving with it.
F. Guffey
Look at the chemicals it contains. Too many have been led to believe it is a polish. It is neither a polish or a wax.
Converting brass cases into jewelry is one of the fastest growing hobbies. It really deserves its own forum, thereby relieving this one of the congestion.Generally my brass does not hit the ground. If it was dirty I would wipe it off. People that are into shiny will make their brass shiny, but I have never known one one short range benchrest shooter who used a tumbler or vibratory cleaner on his brass on a regular basis. In that situation I use some 0000 steel wool to remove powder fouling from the outside of case necks and wipe the residue off. That is the extent of my usual case cleaning.
Ok, I’ve read that last sentence three times now and I’m still scratching my head!
I understand reloading is a mind boggling thing, I understand reloaders have trouble keeping up with factors. I could say time is a factor but that would cause other reloaders to scratch their heads.
F. Guffey
I use the cheap crushed walnut from Horror Freight, two different grits, less than a buck a pound and you can use their 20% off coupon.
https://www.harborfreight.com/catalogsearch/result/index/?dir=asc&order=EAScore,f,EAFeatured+Weight,f,Sale+Rank,f&q=walnut
I do the same as this^^As you can see most people like to clean to keep dirt out of their dies etc.... I actually run it twice , once before I resize and once after to get the imperial out of the necks so the powder doesn't stick to the inside of the necks....
in 12 years of commercial brass sale, not a single dealer in the brass biz used walnut...not one. one company used a wet process, everyone else used fine ground corn cob( sold as blasting media).
if we could save a penny some where we would, not happening with walnut.