Wet tumbling

Mine just showed up yesterday. 200 pieces of 260 and 22-250 set to go this evening. How does the solution from frankford arsenal work as opposed to lemishine and dish soap?

Not sure about the Frankford solution but the most effective I've found so far is Tide EE cold water laundry soap and a touch of Lemishine..amounts vary by the size of your Tumbler but I'd start with 1 teaspoon of Tide and a 1/4 teaspoon of Lemi to start.. this combo rinses out better than the liquid dish soap..and does not over suds..
 
Mine just showed up yesterday. 200 pieces of 260 and 22-250 set to go this evening. How does the solution from frankford arsenal work as opposed to lemishine and dish soap?

It works just fine, alot of people suggest giving the pins a run through first to clean them of any factory lube. We all know the soap/lemi combo works so use the pre-packaged solution to clean the pins
 
We just received a new shipment of Frankford Arsenal ones yesterday, they will hold up to 1,000 pieces depending on calibre and are not only purpose designed for tumbling brass but come with everything you need to get started.

http://selectshootingsupplies.com/products/platinum-series-rotary-tumbler-7l
 
You are better off to buy the purpose built ss tumbler like Frankford that has everything you need. It comes with the media separator ends, the pins and of course the tumbler. You can do 100 or larger batches, it's nice to have the option. I end up tumbling other friends brass all the time.
 
Have tumbled a few thousand pieces of large rifle brass through my Frankford Arsenal Platinum rotary tumbler with lovely results. However, the last few batches of .30-06 have come out only "reasonably clean", some tarnish, and not nearly as 'golden' as my initial batches.

Since I never strain all the SS media out of the drum, merely the water and then fish the brass out by (gloved) hand, I figured the decline must likely be due to a gradual accumulation of fine powder residue, lead dust, oxides, etc. etc. I thought I'd experiment by adding a cup (250ml) of Spray Nine degreaser and and two cups of water with a touch of dish soap. An hour later, I was somewhat surprised when, upon draining, the water was the darkest, sludgiest I'd ever seen. Perhaps some residue over time clings to the inner lining of the rubberised drum? I mean, nothing sticks to the SS pins.

Anyways, my next batch of Barnes tipped .30-30 came out glistening like new again. Anyways, food for thought.
 
Have tumbled a few thousand pieces of large rifle brass through my Frankford Arsenal Platinum rotary tumbler with lovely results. However, the last few batches of .30-06 have come out only "reasonably clean", some tarnish, and not nearly as 'golden' as my initial batches.

Since I never strain all the SS media out of the drum, merely the water and then fish the brass out by (gloved) hand, I figured the decline must likely be due to a gradual accumulation of fine powder residue, lead dust, oxides, etc. etc. I thought I'd experiment by adding a cup (250ml) of Spray Nine degreaser and and two cups of water with a touch of dish soap. An hour later, I was somewhat surprised when, upon draining, the water was the darkest, sludgiest I'd ever seen. Perhaps some residue over time clings to the inner lining of the rubberised drum? I mean, nothing sticks to the SS pins.

Anyways, my next batch of Barnes tipped .30-30 came out glistening like new again. Anyways, food for thought.

It does accumulate if you don't rinse thoroughly, I like to rinse the pins after the cases have gone for a couple of minutes under hot water till the water is clear..
 
Not sure about the Frankford solution but the most effective I've found so far is Tide EE cold water laundry soap and a touch of Lemishine..amounts vary by the size of your Tumbler but I'd start with 1 teaspoon of Tide and a 1/4 teaspoon of Lemi to start.. this combo rinses out better than the liquid dish soap..and does not over suds..

I will have to try Tide. I am assuming it is the powder?
 
Cheap dollar store Dawn dish soap and a little citric acid (Lemishine) is all you really need.

The soap softens the carbon/dirt on your brass, the pins gently abrade said carbon and dirt off your brass.
The citric acid is acid so... that's gotta be good or just magic
 
It works just fine, alot of people suggest giving the pins a run through first to clean them of any factory lube. We all know the soap/lemi combo works so use the pre-packaged solution to clean the pins

Some people have also found that when new the pins have burrs on them that tend to mark the brass. I ran mine for about 6 hours with just the pins and soap to round off any rough edges. Seems to have done the trick as the brass now comes out really shiny.
 
Just ordered a Frankford from Select Shooters Supply!
Thanks everyone!
Mike

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