Tumbler media question

rayzorloo

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Hey CGN, I'm new to reloading, I have my press set up and am slowly learning all the 'intricacies' involved. Which is actually fun stuff to learn, watch YT and read about. One of the things I came across involves the cleaning process of tumbling. I've read of using walnut media, but today I read about using NuFinish car polish along with the media? Anyone do this and how much do you use? Dumb question but does it just get mixed in with the media and brass?

Thanks
 
Anyone do this and how much do you use?

No hard-and-fast rule, a capful or two should do.

Dumb question but does it just get mixed in with the media and brass?

Run the tumbler for a few minutes with just the media and polish then add the brass.


P.S. Look into reptile bedding, it's usually cheaper than the media specifically marketed for reloading.

P.P.S. Eventually you'll set aside the dry tumbler in favour of wet tumbling.
 
Hey CGN, I'm new to reloading, I have my press set up and am slowly learning all the 'intricacies' involved. Which is actually fun stuff to learn, watch YT and read about. One of the things I came across involves the cleaning process of tumbling. I've read of using walnut media, but today I read about using NuFinish car polish along with the media? Anyone do this and how much do you use? Dumb question but does it just get mixed in with the media and brass?

Thanks

Gets mixed in before you put the brass in. But I haven't added any since the first time. And my brass comes out shiny. I use crushed walnut lizard bedding. 5L bag was under 10$.
 
I use Princess Auto crushed walnut. NuFinish Polish. Works great. Only a capfull of it. I don’t even run it before throwing in the brass.
 
Another question for you folks...so I tumbled my first batch for almost 4 hours with the walnut and capful of NuFinish. Brass on the outside looks shiny but the inside is not. Do I tumble it some more or is walnut media not going to get the job done for the inside?
 
The insides don't have to be shiny, as long as its fairly clean in there its ok. Eventually you can move to wet tumbling, which I find a lot better. It gets the brass cleaner inside and out and I found that 90 minutes is more than enough.
 
Another question for you folks...so I tumbled my first batch for almost 4 hours with the walnut and capful of NuFinish. Brass on the outside looks shiny but the inside is not. Do I tumble it some more or is walnut media not going to get the job done for the inside?

I use a Lyman Turbo 1200. I prefer corncob if I'm buying pre-made stuff, so I don't have to deal with the god awful red power that seemed to coat the inside of the casings when I made the mistake of buying walnut the first time. Maybe it was just crappy media, who knows. With the corn cob you just wipe off a little bit of chaff when you're done and on to the next batch of casings. I got a couple of jugs of Lyman media on sale and have been using it forever, so I haven't looked in to alternative media as mentioned above.
You might find that you have a little chunk of media in the flash hole that doesn't want to come out when your done tumbling, but that will go bye-bye when you de-prime your brass.

I use 2 or 3 caps of NuFinish, but my tumbler holds a lot of media. Pour it in while the tumbler is vibrating, stir it a bit to help it coat the media and prevent it from lumping up at the bottom, leave it running for a half hour and you should never have to worry about it again while you're using that batch of media.
The casings should be left in for 2-3 hours if you want them to really shine. I just leave mine in for 3 hours and they come out spotless every time.

Seems obvious, but if 30 cal brass goes in with your 40 or 45 or your 40 goes in with your 45, invariably a bunch of the smaller casings will get lodged inside the larger ones and the insides of the larger casings won't get scoured. So keeping a close eye on that will help as well.

To address your question though, the outside of the casings will get nice and shiny and the inside will get scoured out just enough to get it clean but it will not be shiny. This does not matter in the slightest, however, since the interior of the case does not need to be shiny, but should just be free of unburned powder, residue, debris, etc. Ditto for the primer pockets.

If for some reason you need the inside of the case and the primer pocket to be shiny as well(I dunno, maybe you're selling the casings and want them to look as new as possible??), you will have to de-prime your brass first and move to a wet tumbling system with stainless media and some sort of detergent solution. Frankford Arsenal makes a really good wet tumbler. I've tried it and it worked really well, but found the process to be a gigantic PITA, and went back to the Lyman after a few batches of brass since it does just as good a job for all intents and purposes.
 
When I ran my vibratory tumbler. I'd just use the Lyman green cob. It lasts a while and I just add a 1/2 cap full of polish when I find it's not cleaning as quickly. The green cob doesn't leave that red rogue residue on the brass and it comes out nice and clean after a 3hr tumble.
 
When I ran my vibratory tumbler. I'd just use the Lyman green cob. It lasts a while and I just add a 1/2 cap full of polish when I find it's not cleaning as quickly. The green cob doesn't leave that red rogue residue on the brass and it comes out nice and clean after a 3hr tumble.

Hi, does the inside come shiny too? Or only stainless can do that I guess?
 
Don't worry about a shiney inside. Just make sure primer pockets and hole are clear. I've used the Lyman media without additives, but I only tumble a couple thousand cases per year at best. There probably is better stuff out there.
 
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