Recently, I was asked to load a quantity of .223 ammo for a fellow forum member. He de-primed, and cleaned the brass with the stainless cleaning media with the appropriate soap and chemicals.
Before I load any ammo, I clean and inspect it. I vibratory cleaned all the brass again in walnut hulls with a mix of mineral spirits and Berry's Case polish. The brass came out bright and clean. I then lubed and full length sized, trimmed with a Dillon Case trimmer. This was followed by chamfering the necks inside and out. I cleaned the brass a second time and then annealed them with a Bench Source annealer. They were again lubed and loaded then cleaned for a final time before they were case gauge inspected.
During the process described above I found stainless steel cleaning media in the spent primer trap of my loader, the bottom of the shop vac attached to the case trimmer, and in the walnut polishing media. There was about two teaspoons of the stainless media in total out of approximately 2500 rounds.
The customer told me he personally blew out each case with air before shipping me the brass.
This leads me to my question. For those using stainless steel cleaning media how many of them are getting all the media removed from their cases before reloading. This media could not be good for de-capping pins, and/or if fired out the barrel.
Nat Lambeth
Before I load any ammo, I clean and inspect it. I vibratory cleaned all the brass again in walnut hulls with a mix of mineral spirits and Berry's Case polish. The brass came out bright and clean. I then lubed and full length sized, trimmed with a Dillon Case trimmer. This was followed by chamfering the necks inside and out. I cleaned the brass a second time and then annealed them with a Bench Source annealer. They were again lubed and loaded then cleaned for a final time before they were case gauge inspected.
During the process described above I found stainless steel cleaning media in the spent primer trap of my loader, the bottom of the shop vac attached to the case trimmer, and in the walnut polishing media. There was about two teaspoons of the stainless media in total out of approximately 2500 rounds.
The customer told me he personally blew out each case with air before shipping me the brass.
This leads me to my question. For those using stainless steel cleaning media how many of them are getting all the media removed from their cases before reloading. This media could not be good for de-capping pins, and/or if fired out the barrel.
Nat Lambeth