Ok…washed shell holders with brass…what’s this finish?
First time I have ever washed shell holders with a batch of new brass that was just processed for neck turning and case trimming. (Neck turning using imperial sizing wax as a lubricant.)
Why did I do it? Don’t know, read a few times that u.s. cleaning is good for cleaning parts not thinking anything, I just added the holders during a brass cleaning cycle.
Shown on the left is brass from the same batch, no appearance change, the brass on the right were the most interesting. Red"ish" coating. Again about 10 cases or so. Shell holder on the far right has never been used. The two on the left are black/brown in color.
Ultrasonic cleaning with recipe of about 1 ½ litres of tap water, 1 teaspoon lemi-shine, 1 teaspoon liquid dish soap. Cleaning 100 cases in a Lyman cleaner with heat. Tap water was cold to start and heated by the heater of the unit. Cycle time was approximately 10 minutes.
I am no chemist but the appearance looks like anodizing although I know that’s not the case but some sort of galvanic reaction. What is shown here is just the brass that was adjacent to the shell holders, around 10 in total.. It’s not consistent throughout the batch. The finish on the shell holders feels hard and certainly doesn’t rub off with your hands. Using the shell holders in the press and priming tool indicates that the finish is slowly wearing off.
Pardon my ignorance being a sophomore reloader but what’s happened here?
Secondly, will this finish cause issues with dies, rifle chambers, or sticking bullets in the necks? ( I know removing oxides from cases after annealing is good practice for die maintenance. Eagle Eye’s cold soldering phenomenon is causing a bit of a pucker factor with some occurrences on this end. I use motor mica as a neck lubricant during seating fyi.)
Any insight/experiences welcomed.
Ron
First time I have ever washed shell holders with a batch of new brass that was just processed for neck turning and case trimming. (Neck turning using imperial sizing wax as a lubricant.)
Why did I do it? Don’t know, read a few times that u.s. cleaning is good for cleaning parts not thinking anything, I just added the holders during a brass cleaning cycle.
Shown on the left is brass from the same batch, no appearance change, the brass on the right were the most interesting. Red"ish" coating. Again about 10 cases or so. Shell holder on the far right has never been used. The two on the left are black/brown in color.
Ultrasonic cleaning with recipe of about 1 ½ litres of tap water, 1 teaspoon lemi-shine, 1 teaspoon liquid dish soap. Cleaning 100 cases in a Lyman cleaner with heat. Tap water was cold to start and heated by the heater of the unit. Cycle time was approximately 10 minutes.
I am no chemist but the appearance looks like anodizing although I know that’s not the case but some sort of galvanic reaction. What is shown here is just the brass that was adjacent to the shell holders, around 10 in total.. It’s not consistent throughout the batch. The finish on the shell holders feels hard and certainly doesn’t rub off with your hands. Using the shell holders in the press and priming tool indicates that the finish is slowly wearing off.
Pardon my ignorance being a sophomore reloader but what’s happened here?
Secondly, will this finish cause issues with dies, rifle chambers, or sticking bullets in the necks? ( I know removing oxides from cases after annealing is good practice for die maintenance. Eagle Eye’s cold soldering phenomenon is causing a bit of a pucker factor with some occurrences on this end. I use motor mica as a neck lubricant during seating fyi.)
Any insight/experiences welcomed.
Ron





















































