Cleaning Dies

HuntAway

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I have got some lead 9 mm bullets that have a blue lube on them. Some of the lube is up on the nose and top end of the bullet. I'm pretty sure some of this lube is getting on my dies.

So my question(s) are;
What should I use to clean this lube out of the dies?
How often should dies be cleaned when loading jacketed bullets?

Thanks,

HA
 
I had wax lube build up in one of my bullet seating dies, I used a dental pick to scrape it all out, and that did it for me. I'd clean them as often as neccessary, but I don't think it will be all that often.
 
I pull the seater plug and run an appropriate size brush with some Hoppes #9 through every once in while. A few passes does the trick for me.

Auggie D.
 
Lacquer thinner works well for removing bullet lube from seating dies. You could probably go thousands of rounds between die cleaning, but pay attention to how the loaded rounds are coming out and clean if anything is really out of order. Dies hardly ever need cleaning if you are loading jacketed or plated bullets.
 
Early in my efforts at bullet casting, I used the old Lee lube tray, cookie cutter sizer punch on .45 Colt in my Blackhawk. Lube built up on the nose of the seating punch, and the rounds became incrementally shorter, but in my youthful enthusiasm to see how my bullets worked in my handloads, I didn't notice.

All was well to start, but I eventually clued in that the recoil was getting increasingly stiff, almost, dare I say, unpleasant. Eventually even young bucks have to notice that the hammer spur is digging into the web of their hand, painfully, so I stopped shooting and examined the remaining loads in my MTM Case-Gard. Sure enough, plain to see, the loaded rounds grew progressively shorter as the lube built up on their nose and the bullets were driven deeper and deeper into the case. Nursing my sore hand, I vaguely remembered reading something in Dean Grennell's ABC's of Reloading about seating depth affecting case volumes, pressures, progressive burn rates, and all that mumbo jumbo.

A kinetic bullet puller got them all back to proper OAL, and I learned to clean my dies when mucking about with bullet lube, and to just clean them anyway if I can't remember the last time I have done so. Can't hurt, takes but a minute, and prevents surprises. I since have fired some of Linebaugh's loads and they felt about the same, but if I had been shooting an original 1873, I might have bent it some!

Oh, and I pay more attention to seating depths now too.
 
Boiling water cleans out wax very nicely. Put the die in a bowl, fill with boiling water, and swish it around a bit. Pull it out and let it dry. Use a rust preventer spray.
 
I use de-natured alcohol. It's also good to spray your bore brushes with, the solvent will harm the brass brush over time so the alcohol will neutralize it
 
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I use WD-40.Works for me well enough.

Dies with stubborn lube build-up go inside glass jar and out in the full sun for few hours.Everything comes out withhold problem.

I cleaned out old Lyman 45 this way except instead of jar I used old flower pot with black paint.
I placed disassembled lubricator on patio stone and covered it with pot.Dam thing got very hot by mid day and by evening all lubricant oozed right out.
 
Thanks everyone.

I only have a 1000 of 9's that are cast / lubed other than that I plan on using jacketd bullets. I got the cast for too good a price to turn away from them.

HA
 
How often do you clean your dies if you always have clean brass? (SS Tumbled)

It depends what I'm reloading. With pistol it's once in a blue moon as all my dies are carbide. If I'm reloading 223 which I load a batch 500-1000rds at a time , I'll clean them right after. I don't go crazy with it I just use Q-tips after I gave the die a few sprays with de-natured alcohol. The decapping stem gets a wipe down
 
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