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I had a fun time drying about 100 .223 cases last night. After separating and rinsing them, I put them into one of my wife's baking tins and tossed them in the oven at 180 degrees. Unfortunately, after putting everything away I realized two things: 1.) whoops, that's 180 Celsius! 2.) shit! putting everything away took longer than I thought. So they were in a pre-heated oven at 356 Fahrenheit for about 6 minutes and came out HOT! My initial fear was that I may have annealed the case head, essentially ruining the brass. They didn't come out discolored like when I anneal the necks and 6 minutes isn't that long, but that is still pretty hot and .223 anneals pretty quickly. Needless to say they were plenty dry.
So what do you think? Toss 'em or not worry?
I can honestly say, that my ability to make hits on the 1000 and 1200yd steel plates, definitely improved after I began cleaning with SS.
Hi all, what are most of you using to separate the stainless pins from the brass when complete? I see that STM has a entire kit with a rotary media separator. I wonder how STMs separator works or is there something more efficient being used?
Lastly, what about drying the brass?
Thank you all in advance! Dave
Hi all, what are most of you using to separate the stainless pins from the brass when complete? I see that STM has a entire kit with a rotary media separator. I wonder how STMs separator works or is there something more efficient being used?
Lastly, what about drying the brass?
Thank you all in advance! Dave
After rinsing the brass I pour it all out on a big green micro fiber towel we got for bathing our dogs.
This thing is unbelievable, I will be selling my two rcbs vibrator machines.
size, trim and debur after.
Only prep is to deprime and decrimp (if needed)...
Same here and depending on the case if I use lube to size I re-tumble with dawn and water (use a homemade case lube so soap takes it off really well) after I do the the first tumble then prep.
I'm new to stainless media tumbling, and haven't done any lubed resizing since I got my tumbler a week ago. Are you tumbling them without the steel pins too? And is this home made lube Lanolin based? I've heard stories that Lanolin can be hard to take off. Also, do you use hot, warm or cold water for the de-lube cleaning cycle?
Alright all you Stainless Media Experts, I need some help. I'm just about going crazy over here!
For the life of me, I can't get the insides of my .223 cases bright and shiny anymore. There's no carbon left, but for how dark the cases are on the inside, I might as well have just run these through my vibratory.... I'm pretty sure it's just very tarnished on the inside. The outside looks great.
I've tried everything I can think of, including:
-Altering Lemishine content from 1/8 teaspoon to 1.5 teaspoon
-Cold, warm, and hot water
-Clean pins by running with just soap and Lemishine
-Weighed my remaining pins since I'm a bit clumsy with pin collection (4lbs, 14oz left)
My normal solution is 1/4 teaspoon Lemishine (.40S&W case full), 1.5 tablespoons blue Dawn soap, and warm water ~1.5" from the top. I was running 100 pieces of LC .223 brass. After reloading with brass that was perfectly clean on the inside for the better half of last year, reloading with cases that are dark inside is a bit frustrating. Makes it less convenient to check powder levels, for incipient case head separation, etc.
Here's a picture of what I've got. Properly cleaned case on the left (from a few months ago), what I'm getting now in the middle (today), vibratory cleaned with corn cob on the right (about a year old). What gives? Any help would be appreciated.
The batch with purified water came out much nicer than the previous batches. Looks like my tap water is incompatible with the process.... o_0
Hard water doesn't do as good of a job as soft water.
We have soft water here and I have none of the problems some guys experience.
I doubt a brita gets rid of the minerals in your water.
That said your cases are more than clean enough and no tumbler will do as well.
The carbon is gone and just staining remains.
My advice is to forget about it.