- Location
- West Quebec
I decap and then wet tumble
I used to tumble before depriming and then after resizing to remove the lube. No I have a dedicated depriming die as I didn't like running dirty brass through my resizing dies. Now my process looks more like deprime, tumble to clean, resize, tumble to remove lube.
Dry tumble first, deprime with a Lee universal deprime die, wet SS pin tumble and then reload.
I used to tumble before depriming and then after resizing to remove the lube. No I have a dedicated depriming die as I didn't like running dirty brass through my resizing dies. Now my process looks more like deprime, tumble to clean, resize, tumble to remove lube.
Tumble first. I have done it both ways and hate having to pull media out of most of the primer pockets with my dart tip. It's very time consuming. But to each his own. OCD had me doing it before and after but ADD made me quit.
I've always (decades) resized, wipe off case lube with a rag and tumble between 4 to 6 hours. Usually half the flash holes have a one single piece of media which I flick out with a very small pick.
I never resize any brass before it is cleaned, then when it is resized I tumble again to remove the sizing lubricant. Never fire a cartridge that has remnants of Lube on it.
I always deprime before I tumble. Sure, about 80% of the cases will then have a piece of media in the primer pocket, but it takes a second to pop it out with a dental pick when I examine the cases. Up here in the 'territories specialized media is hard or impossible to locate. I use cheap bulk rice for rifle calibers, and the crushed corncob that they sell for hamster and rabbit litter for large calibre rifle and handgun. If the brass is really grundgy I'll add some Lyman Turbo media. I find it has too much rouge to use by itself but it will really wake up cheaper medias.
Dry Tumbling rarely cleans the pocket after the primer has been removed as the pockets get clogged hindering any movement. The extra work and the chances of missing a piece of material in the brass increases with the numbers cleaned. Wet tumbling with the primer removed is the preferred and safest method.
Dry Tumbling rarely cleans the pocket after the primer has been removed as the pockets get clogged hindering any movement. The extra work and the chances of missing a piece of material in the brass increases with the numbers cleaned. Wet tumbling with the primer removed is the preferred and safest method.