Is cleaning brass a critical step?
The last few batches of reloads I've done, I just scrubbed the necks with a brush and neck-sized them dry.
I had experimented with adding vinegar and salt to the mixture I mentioned above, but found the cases were turning dull and pink. Having said that, I don't care too much about the bling effect, my goal is to get the inside of the case and primer pockets clean.
The only effective option that would satisfy you is a wet tumbler with SS pins. Mechanical cleaning is the only way to clean pocket primers, so it's wet tumbling with SS or primer pocket cleaner. For the inside of cases it's either a small brush with gun cleaner (which would take forever) or, again, wet tumbler with SS pins.
Removing the burned powder requires some friction. That's what happens in a tumbler. It works well because the burned powder is less bonded to the brass than the strength of the brass itself. So if you want to replicate that, you'll need to create some friction too, using some tools.
If you want to use chemicals to dissolve the powder residue without any mechanical effort, you'll need something that will dissolve carbon residue but won't attack brass. There's isn't really any product that does that very well, especially if you factor prices in the equation. Try gun cleaning products. I'd start with Remington action cleaner, and if that doesn't work well, try bore solvent, but bore solvent will attack brass to some extent, so try with small amounts of cheap 9mm cases that you don't mind ruining at first.
I've tried almost every cheap and convenient household chemicals before I bought a SS tumbler, and nothing works very well. Soaking the cases into an acidic solution is especially useless and hard on the brass. I've tried mild stuff like vinegar and stronger acid like chloridric acid (in varying concentration, soaking time and temperature), and everything attacks brass more than it dissolves powder residue. The last 2 things I was gonna try but didn't (because I bought a SS tumbler and concluded the tumbler was the way to go) were bleach (doubt it'll work well) and Oxi clean stain remover (which I have used successfully to remove stains similar to powder residue on clothes).
For benchrest everything is critical. For any other kind of shooting, there's 3 reasons to clean your brass:
1-You don't like to manipulate dirty brass. Can just wear gloves and problem solved;
2-Dirt and grime can scratch the inside of your dies. If you don't mind polishing dies often and replacing them quite often too, then it's not a problem either;
3-To inspect cases. It's a lot harder to inspect cases for cracks and any other problems if the brass is dirty. With clean cases, every tiny crack at the mouth becomes obvious.
Personnaly I'd nover bother hand-washing cases, unless they were 50bmg or something big and expensive like that.
Is cleaning brass a critical step?
The last few batches of reloads I've done, I just scrubbed the necks with a brush and neck-sized them dry.
Just curious. What's your routine for reloading when you shoot benchrest?
That's kind of how I feel about most things shooting related.As much anal as critical for most people.![]()
I like to clean the brass enough so my dies don't get so dirty so fast. Dies should be cleaned regularly too, of course, even if you use cleaned brass. I have loaded rifle brass uncleaned, or just scraping out the primer pocket with a hand tool. Dies get contaminated quite quickly.
There is not always a right/wrong way to do things, and especially so with reloading. If un-cleaned brass works for you then there is no reason to feel like you're doing something wrong. Your brass is clean enough for your needs and don't worry about it. There may come a time when you do find a need to clean the brass but until you do then let your experience and judgement guide you.



























