Sandstorm
Gold $$ Contributor
Yes...for me it is.carbon on the inside of the neck beneficial
Yes...for me it is.carbon on the inside of the neck beneficial
At times when I want to quickly clean some brass and reload it, I've tried both rice and buckwheat groats with deprimed brass in my rotary tumbler. After about one and a half hours, the results have been very impressive.
Haven't had that issue but a friend of mine did. He ended up lightly washing the groats and then baking them at like 375 degrees for 30 minutes to dry them. He said they've worked great for several dozen runs since. The ones I use are a Russian brand, very hard with very little dust. I like them in the tumbler but, I've never tried them in a vibratory cleaner.The one time I tried the groats, the cases came out clean, but I ended up with a fine white powder over all the cases (inside and out), as well as a caked-on powder on the inside of my vibe tumbler bowl. Is this something you deal with?
Rice works, but just OK for me (read: "not great"); my go-to is still crushed walnut shell treated with a tablespoon or so of automotive cleaner wax.
Yeah, Corncob does a better job on polishing than walnut. Walnut cleans hard stuff off the cases better than corn. Sort of depends what you're after. [As an aside, look into grit blasting media at your local home improvement/hardware store for bulk walnut shell and occasionally corn cob (you need to decide on a grit size; I like the smaller stuff.)]divingin
When I dry tumbled I liked the walnut media better even less dust the corn .
One time I accidently mixed my corn with walnut and the brass came out just fine so now I use the mixture of the walnut & corn on purpose. It saves me a step in not having to run two different tumble sessions.
Yes, that. Brass defects are easier for me to see with polished brass.You used to run twice, once in walnut and once in cob? Clean then polish?