Sometimes you get trapped into doing something just because. For more years than I can remember I used a tumbler with treated corn cob media. My cases came out pristine clean. They looked nice. In addition, I've always pre-cleaned the necks with 0000 steel wool to remove stubborn carbon.
Early this year my old tumbler finally died. Since I've been trying to downsize, an effort I fear may be futile,

, I asked myself what are the practical benefits of doing this? What are the negatives.
The negatives. Extra piece of equipment and consumables (media); as careful as I could be, I still got that media all over the place, in my slippers, etc.; time consuming, difficult to manage my cases since I dedicate cases to a specific rifle, but the overriding negative was that media residue was gumming up my shell holders and FL dies. To prevent that I had to wipe the cases off after coming out of the tumbler adding another step to an already time-consuming process.
The positives. The cases look nice.
Then I watched Erik Cortina's video and while I don't subscribe to everything he says, the fact that he doesn't clean his cases re-enforced the decision I already had made.
So, I stop tumbling case. I just continued to clean the necks as I always had then wiped the cases off with a shop rag light saturated with mineral spirits. Guess what? They shoot the same! Maybe they don't look as nice but there was absolutely no performance change. I am one happy non-tumbler reloader.






Wished I had done this 30 years ago.
Second Question: I don't lube the inside of the necks since my expander balls are polished to a smooth "glass like" finished and sized appropriately to uniform the necks but minimize drag of the necks.