Re: quick drying brass
<div class="ubbcode-block"><div class="ubbcode-header">Originally Posted By: turbo54</div><div class="ubbcode-body"><div class="ubbcode-block"><div class="ubbcode-header">Originally Posted By: suasponte</div><div class="ubbcode-body">Ditto with the Ammo can! Been going strong now for close to 3-4 years.
Terry </div></div>
Terry, I got the idea from you! A little engineering insight...
1. Consider buying a roll of the ridiculously shiny ducting tape, and lining the inside of your can with it. The outside walls of my can BARELY get warm even after the light has been on for nearly an hour. Before the tape, the walls would get WARM! The reflective tape has very low emissivity, and reflects the radiant heat back, rather than the dull green paint absorbing the radiant heat. Thus, more heat is put into the brass, making it more energy efficient, and faster working.
2. Notice how I positioned my fan. I have 1/2" holes cut in the bottom corners of my can to allow cool, dry air in, and my fan is really an exhaust fan, which blows hot, moist air out the top. Hot air rises, so airflow going from bottom to top makes natural sense. Also, fans like these (we have the same fan because I borrowed your shopping list) work much more efficiently as pullers, not pushers. That is why a car's radiator fan sucks air through the radiator, rather than pushing it.
3. Stock up on 100W incandescent light bulbs. The Feudal lords in Congress have decided us Serfs are "better off" without incandescent light bulbs, and 100 watters are banned as of 01/01/2012. 75W are banned a year later.
Hope you don't think I'm criticizing... Your drying box idea is the ONLY reason I was able to stick with the stainless tumbling media. As nice a job it does, the process was just too much when I factored in the drying situation!</div></div>
I wonder how well the "chrome" paint would reflect the heat, just spray the inside til shiny.