Tumbling live ammo

Not true whatsoever.

To the OP, I wet tumble reloaded ammo in the final stage and have had zero issues.

I was curious about this myself:confused:. I want to wet tumble finished cartridges, but was looking for people who have experience already?

Is it cool to wet tumble finished cartridges?:d
 
bullsh??ter . . . At least you got your call sign correctly.
Tumbling loaded ammo could cause the powder to crumble into smaller pieces thereby increasing the rate of burn and increasing chamber pressure.
I personally would not take the chance.
 
A dry cartridge when fired sticks to the chamber walls and the pressure has to be great enough to cause the brass to stretch to touch the bolt face. A oiled or lubed cartridge immediately "slides" back into the bolt face applying twice the pressure for a longer period. (dwell time)

In simple terms a dry cartridge acts like a cars shock absorber and minimizes the force or bolt thrust applied to your locking lugs. The more force applied to your locking lugs the faster your rifle wears and the headspace increases. When this excessive bolt thrust happens in can cause bolt lug failure and a Kaboom.

Example, P.O. Ackley (Ackley improved cartridges) did a experiment with a Winchester 94 30-30 rifle. He removed the locking bolt from the 30-30 rifle, dried the chamber completely and remotely fired the rifle. And nothing happened, the case gripped the chamber walls and never moved to the rear with just the primer protruding from the case.

Also many of the early "Short Magnum" cartridges had lug setback problems because the short case did not have enough surface area to fully "grip" the chamber walls and applied excessive bolt thrust to the bolt lugs.

Bottom line there is no reason to beat your rifles to death and cause increased wear on them. So wipe the lube off your cases and dry your chambers and bores before firing your rifles. And remember older rifle designs were made of softer steels and one of the main reason why the Enfield rifle had replaceable bolt heads. The Enfield rifle was proof tested with two oiled proof cartridges and if the headspace increased .003 or more the rifle failed proof testing. So do "NOT" believe anyone who tells you its OK to lube your ammo. These people do not have the test equipment to back up their claims.

BoltRightLugCloseup0212192009-1_zps1aqcjc7e.jpg

Thanks for the info. I think I'll tumble after resizing from now on.
 
I wipe my resized cases off with a rag and that's it, many people wet tumble the cases a second time to remove the case lube. In over 47 years of reloading I have never tumbled a case or loaded cartridge to remove any lube. I also have been retired for over eight years and have plenty of time to wipe cases off with a rag and see no reason to rush. Wiping the case off by hand and visually inspecting the case is just one of the "quality" steps in reloading and safety.

I also reload ammunition for my two sons and Dad isn't going to be blamed for any bad ammo. (I have brass OCD)
 
I'm going to the range this Sunday.

I'm going to load 20 rounds of 9mm ammunition tonight. I'll tumble 10 of them for 6 hours on Saturday and report back the chrono findings.

I'm sick of reading conjecture and random stuff touted as fact on CGN. I personally don't know and never realized if there was a pressure difference.. but i'll know soon enough.

Turn on tumbler now and tumble until last minute. 6 hours is nothing. 6 days would be better.
 
Tumble off the coating.

Hmmm. Last time I looked (IMR plant) they tumble the powder to get the graphite coating on to the powder.

The deterrent (DNT) goes on before the graphite, and it is not a surface coating . It infuses into the kernels. I cannot be rubbed off.
 
I had several hundred rounds of Czech 50's production brass case nickel jacket 7.62x25 that were pretty tarnished. Tumbled the #### out of them and now they are almost too pretty to shoot at anything other then werewolf's.
Oh they shot fine too, no difference then the steel cased stuff from the same era.
 
Last edited:
Done it, no issues. Multiple threads on the same topic on THEHIGHROAD.ORG No issues found there either.

Use an appliance timer in series with your tumbler if you want to limit the duration
(and wear on your tumbler).

Thought experiment - what do you think happens to cartridge powder in military packaging as it is being hauled many miles over bad roads in the back of a truck?
 
Just don't tumble hollow points. I have a batch with many where the stainless pins found their way in to the hollow point. Never would have thought it possible.

Had the same experience with .30-30 reloads using Barnes TSX with the gaping maw of a hollowpoint. Keep a dental pick handy to pop out the occasional stuck pin.
 
That reminds me to Vib tumble the loaded alox/jpw rounds to get rid of extra lube.
Would not risk wet tumbling unless rounds are sealed.
 
I deprime then tumble, then resize then tumble, then prime and load.

But I would not hesitate to dry tumble live ammo if I ever felt the need.
 
Just don't tumble hollow points. I have a batch with many where the stainless pins found their way in to the hollow point. Never would have thought it possible.

Don't tumble reloaded cartridges with lubed lead bullets either cause you'll be wiping the walnut media dust off of each and every bullet.
 
Tumbling loaded ammo could cause the powder to crumble into smaller pieces thereby increasing the rate of burn and increasing chamber pressure.
I personally would not take the chance.

Absolutely! Tumbling a loaded shell is a bad idea. I put my case in a drill chuck case holder and with a cloth spin the case and wipe the lube off. This is before I prime and load the case..
 
Below is my priming tool and the primers are each handled by hand. So each case after sizing is wiped carefully by hand with a clean rag and then I wash my hands when done.

"After" all lube is removed from the cases and my hands have been washed I prime the cases.

This is why Hornady One Shot case lube is so popular, its a dry film lubricant. The cases do not need to be wiped or tumbled and it will not contaminate primers or powder. That being said I do not use One Shot and just wipe the cases off like I have done for over 47 years of reloading.

RCBSPrimer-b_zps7e084f16.jpg


I'm 65 and no longer have a young mans eyes and wear clip-on magnifiers over my glasses to see better close up when reloading. So my question is if you do not handle each case to inspect it as you wipe it off where is your quality control. As a example last week I was wiping the lube off a .223/5.56 case and the rag snagged on a very small split in the case neck mouth. And this wiping rag found a crack in the case mouth I could not see and would have missed if I had not been wiping each case by hand.

Speed Kills, slow down and enjoy the view. When you speed up the reloading process you increase the chance of missing something. And this reloaded case is inches away from your face when you pull the trigger.
 
Back
Top Bottom