Corn cob stuck in .223 cases?

greg11

CGN frequent flyer
Rating - 97.3%
36   1   0
Damn it, I totally did not think about the granule size of my media before I began tumbling today.

Now every piece of brass has corn cob lodged into it.

How the hell do I get all of it out? Is there a quick way? Or is it just plain old time consuming, going one by one?
 
Are your cases jam-packed full of corncob, or are there just a few granules plugging up the flash hole and/or the primer pocket?

For the latter, a decapping die in your press will clear it out just fine, immediately prior to your priming station (if you're using a progressive).

If your case is full:
1 - hopefully you didn't add any liquids (e.g. varsol) immediately prior to tumbling; this will make each granule swell a bit, and really jam things up tightly
2 - if it's just lightly jammed into the case, bumping them around will loosen it up. E.g. if you have a media separator, crank it around in there and it ought to eventually work free

It is important to make sure you don't have appreciable amounts of media left in your cases, they take up volume and will increase chamber pressures

If the media seems quite tight and can't be dislodged, try drying it out really (e.g. put the jam-packed brass over a heat register or on top of a radiator for several days). If you can get the corncob bone-dry, it'll shrink a bit and might loosen up enough to allow you success on your next try.
 
I use a Lee case trim pilot to knock the little piece of media out of the flash hole. It takes about all of 3 or 4 minutes to do 100 pieces.
 
The tumbling media seems to range in size from .200 to .260 in diameter. It appears that some pieces of cob are just barely bigger than the case mouth. Flash holes aren't an issue because the cases haven't been deprimed yet.

The trouble really is that the pieces of corn cob are very light, which means I can't "Smack" them free since the pieces don't develop enough momentum to work themselves free.

Stupid me. This is totally a learning moment for me.

Luckily, we're only talking 80 pieces of brass.

I'll try to dry them out Dan, and if that doesn't work, I'll have to go fishing with a paper clip!!!
 
I may be a little anal when it comes to case prep, but I use compressed air from a rubber tipped blowgun to blow each case out after tumbling to make sure there is not any media or dust left in there.
 
The tumbling media seems to range in size from .200 to .260 in diameter. It appears that some pieces of cob are just barely bigger than the case mouth. Flash holes aren't an issue because the cases haven't been deprimed yet.

Hmmm, that sounds like unusually large pieces.

Corncob comes in different sizes. The stuff used for cleaning brass has kernels perhaps a third or a quarter of the diameter of a small rifle primer pocket. If you're in Fredericton again, drop by to visit and I can give you a batch worth of corncob media,
 
I use a Lee case trim pilot to knock the little piece of media out of the flash hole. It takes about all of 3 or 4 minutes to do 100 pieces.
X2 I just make it part of the process that every case goes through. I don't even look to see if the flash hole is plugged or not. I have found that doing it this way eliminates the possibility that I may have missed a blocked or partially blocked flash hole and any worry that may go along with that possibility.
 
Back
Top Bottom