• This Forum is for adults 18 years of age or over. By continuing to use this Forum you are confirming that you are 18 or older. No content shall be viewed by any person under 18 in California.

CLEANING INSIDE CASE NECKS

Was just wanting to pick a few of yalls brains to see how other people were prepping there brass after fired. specially inside the necks do you use brass brush nylon brush? or whats the best ways some of yall think. thanks john
 
I usually use a brass brush wrapped with a patch then sprayed with case lube. Seems to work pretty good.
 
Nylon brush, then neck sized on a Wilson die then dipped in dry media lube (moly dust) then resized through a sizing mandrel and then loaded. Gives very consistent neck tension.
 
many , including me, believe leaving a little bit of stuff inside neck is good. a VERY shiney neck will result is a type of bonding between bullet and brass...often referred to as "cold bonding". a LOT of discussion on this was on this site. this 'bonding" results in a "popping" sound when the bullet is seated deeper. my experience, as others. is that shooting such rounds can result in a big variation in velocity, thus accuracy. if however, such rounds are seated long then chambered with bullet going into the lands thus seating deeper into the neck, this bond is broken and mv variation may not be an issue. try this...polish a bullet and inside neck with flitz or isso or metal polish, seat bullet and wait a few days or longer, the seat the bullet .005 thous deeper and you will probably hear the "pop".
 
In my tests it didn't do crap. I wouldn't. Either clean all the way, like Ultrasonic, or don't clean at all.
 
lpreddick said:
try this...polish a bullet and inside neck with flitz or isso or metal polish, seat bullet and wait a few days or longer, the seat the bullet .005 thous deeper and you will probably hear the "pop".

So?
 
I put one of these
22-270CottonBoreMop.jpg


on one of these

cordless_dremel.jpg


and clean the inside of the neck, speed about 80%

the neck will be clean and shiny without using any lubricants or chemicals.

just a quick push & pull in the neck, the mop turns over 100 rounds in that second... 8000rpm at 80%
 
My necks end up pretty clean. So just before seating a bullet, I take the case neck and insert it in a small container of BBs that have been coated with graphite powder. Makes the bullets seat easy and also coats the naked interior of the neck with with a dry lubricant.

Bob
 
Jwilliams31 said:
Thanks for the responds. Intresting hearing what people do different.

Yes it is ridiculous, not any two answers the same. I would never Knock anything Tclaunch would have to say as he is a champion shooter and my friend but the only one I agree with is lpreddick, the necks should be brushed but not totally cleaned, no solvents of any kind is needed imo squeaky clean necks is never a good thing, I would rather not touch them at all as to over clean them. I find the most consistent seating pressure is when I give 5-10 good stokes with a nylon brush just prior to charging and seating.
Wayne.
 
bozo699 said:
Jwilliams31 said:
Thanks for the responds. Intresting hearing what people do different.

I would never Knock anything Tclaunch would have to say as he is a champion shooter and my friend but the only one I agree with is lpreddick, the necks should be brushed but not totally cleaned, no solvents of any kind is needed

Wayne, I believe Tim was referring to the Montana Extreme brand of Nylon brush...and not using the Montana Extreme solvent in conjunction with a Nylon brush for his necks.....But I could be wrong.... Maybe he can clarify. I myself use a Montana Extreme stiff Nylon brush chucked in a drill to brush em with.
 
pmarauder said:
bozo699 said:
Jwilliams31 said:
Thanks for the responds. Intresting hearing what people do different.

I would never Knock anything Tclaunch would have to say as he is a champion shooter and my friend but the only one I agree with is lpreddick, the necks should be brushed but not totally cleaned, no solvents of any kind is needed

Wayne, I believe Tim was referring to the Montana Extreme brand of Nylon brush...and not using the Montana Extreme solvent in conjunction with a Nylon brush for his necks.....But I could be wrong.... Maybe he can clarify. I myself use a Montana Extreme stiff Nylon brush chucked in a drill to brush em with.

Derek,
In that case I agree 100% with Tim and you, I use the same process except I use a rcbs case prep station with the Montana nylon brush, thanks for clearing the montana extreme thing up for me I was definitely thinking solvent :D
Wayne.
 
bozo699 said:
Derek,
In that case I agree 100% with Tim and you, I use the same process except I use a rcbs case prep station with the Montana nylon brush, thanks for clearing the montana extreme thing up for me I was definitely thinking solvent :D
Wayne.

I tried this. I even BUFFED the inside of the case neck using polish. It had the 2nd smallest effect of all factors I tried for seating bullets (including dry lube, painting moly lube, painting graphite lube, etc among others---the first was dry lube which appeared to do nothing at all). I found that the greatest factor for effecting seating force is (by far) the amount the neck is sized, and the seating force goes through the roof at .002" of interference.

At .0005" of interference (unturned, full thickness Lapua necks) I can nearly seat the bullet with the Wilson die by pushing it with my hand, which I figure is about right. My groups have agreeing with me also...
 
Bradley Walker said:
bozo699 said:
Derek,
In that case I agree 100% with Tim and you, I use the same process except I use a rcbs case prep station with the Montana nylon brush, thanks for clearing the montana extreme thing up for me I was definitely thinking solvent :D
Wayne.

I tried this. I even BUFFED the inside of the case neck using polish. It had the 2nd smallest effect of all factors I tried for seating bullets (including dry lube, painting moly lube, painting graphite lube, etc among others---the first was dry lube which appeared to do nothing at all). I found that the greatest factor for effecting seating force is (by far) the amount the neck is sized, and the seating force goes through the roof at .002" of interference.

At .0005" of interference (unturned, full thickness Lapua necks) I can nearly seat the bullet with the Wilson die by pushing it with my hand, which I figure is about right. My groups have agreeing with me also...

Bradley,
If that is working for you my friend,...don't change a thing!! I agree with you on less tension ;)
Wayne.
 
I agree with Wayne, lpreddick, and tclaunch.
Just a quick run through with a nylon brush.

This will provide for consistent seating.
 
I used to run case necks over a bronze bore brush spinning in my drill press @ ~ 150 RPM. Then I started cleaning cases with the SS media / detergent method.

Haven't haf to clean a case neck since.
 

Upgrades & Donations

This Forum's expenses are primarily paid by member contributions. You can upgrade your Forum membership in seconds. Gold and Silver members get unlimited FREE classifieds for one year. Gold members can upload custom avatars.


Click Upgrade Membership Button ABOVE to get Gold or Silver Status.

You can also donate any amount, large or small, with the button below. Include your Forum Name in the PayPal Notes field.


To DONATE by CHECK, or make a recurring donation, CLICK HERE to learn how.

Forum statistics

Threads
165,807
Messages
2,203,760
Members
79,130
Latest member
Jsawyer09
Back
Top