So after picking up a Lyman stainless tumbling kit this fall I've found out it's not as fool-proof as everyone seems to say they are.
First thing I learned was that you can't tumble sandy brass. My old dry tumbler doesn't care if the brass is sandy or not but in a wet tumbler it all comes out burnished and dull if there's even a bit of sand in there. So I end up having to do a rinse run, followed by a cleaning run with pins which is annoying.
Anyway my new issue is a batch of 300pcs of .308 Win brass (mixed nickle and yellow brass) all came out very black; so black I can't tell the nickel from the yellow by eye. The exterior of the cases were clean going in but had been FL-sized and still had lube on them. I wanted to clean off the lube and clean the inside and primer pockets. I use a mix of lanolin and isopropyl for sizing and it was still on the cases (lanolin anyway, isopropyl would have evaporated before I put them in). I use a tablespoon each of Lemishine and sunlight dish detergent with hot water; same as I've used for every batch so far. The water that came out looked just as black as it always does.
I've run a dozen batches of 9mm mixed nickel and yellow brass as well as two batches of .40 of the same and they all came out nice and clean (after running twice due to sand).
I just ran a batch of all yellow brass .223 that also had the same lanolin lube on it and it all came out clean and shiny.
I thought maybe it was carbon from the inside of the cases but it doesn't rub off at all. ScotchBrite pads will remove it but it's removing material so that's not surprising.
The only variable that's changed is the proportion of nickel to yellow brass. This batch that went all black was 2/3 nickel plated brass and 1/3 yellow brass.
I'm running it again now with fresh water and will see what happens.
Has anyone else run into this?
*edit*
A friend sent me a link to a forum where they said lanolin is exceedingly difficult to wash off with a stainless tumbler and it often ends up with sticky, black cases. Everyone recommends running the lubed brass in a dry tumbler for an hour before switching to stainless wet tumbling. Well that's a piss-off. Stainless wet tumbling sure seems like a PITA for marginally better results than dry tumbling.
First thing I learned was that you can't tumble sandy brass. My old dry tumbler doesn't care if the brass is sandy or not but in a wet tumbler it all comes out burnished and dull if there's even a bit of sand in there. So I end up having to do a rinse run, followed by a cleaning run with pins which is annoying.
Anyway my new issue is a batch of 300pcs of .308 Win brass (mixed nickle and yellow brass) all came out very black; so black I can't tell the nickel from the yellow by eye. The exterior of the cases were clean going in but had been FL-sized and still had lube on them. I wanted to clean off the lube and clean the inside and primer pockets. I use a mix of lanolin and isopropyl for sizing and it was still on the cases (lanolin anyway, isopropyl would have evaporated before I put them in). I use a tablespoon each of Lemishine and sunlight dish detergent with hot water; same as I've used for every batch so far. The water that came out looked just as black as it always does.
I've run a dozen batches of 9mm mixed nickel and yellow brass as well as two batches of .40 of the same and they all came out nice and clean (after running twice due to sand).
I just ran a batch of all yellow brass .223 that also had the same lanolin lube on it and it all came out clean and shiny.
I thought maybe it was carbon from the inside of the cases but it doesn't rub off at all. ScotchBrite pads will remove it but it's removing material so that's not surprising.
The only variable that's changed is the proportion of nickel to yellow brass. This batch that went all black was 2/3 nickel plated brass and 1/3 yellow brass.
I'm running it again now with fresh water and will see what happens.
Has anyone else run into this?
*edit*
A friend sent me a link to a forum where they said lanolin is exceedingly difficult to wash off with a stainless tumbler and it often ends up with sticky, black cases. Everyone recommends running the lubed brass in a dry tumbler for an hour before switching to stainless wet tumbling. Well that's a piss-off. Stainless wet tumbling sure seems like a PITA for marginally better results than dry tumbling.
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