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Thread: "Brown brass"

  1. #21
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    Quote Originally Posted by jebsca View Post
    Based on what I have read, I try to put a pound each of ss media, brass, and water in each drum.
    This is what I read elsewhere, too.

    gandog, do you use any Dawn dish detergent or just water and Lemi-Shine?

    Ed

  2. #22
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    Dawn and Lemi-shine. I have a 15 pound drum, use a gallon of water, 5 lbs. of media. And not a whole lot of Dawn, and like 1/2 tablespoon of Lemi-shine

  3. #23
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    So, is this the original, dry Lemi-Shine? I picked some up, but want to make sure before I use it. I checked the ingredients and it seemed pretty simple (i.e. not harmful to brass), just "real fruit acids and natural citrus oils."

    Ed

  4. #24
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    Quote Originally Posted by jebsca View Post
    Based on what I have read, I try to put a pound each of ss media, brass, and water in each drum. I add a bit of dish soap and lemi-shine. I have played with the run time, and two hours looks about as good as it gets, even with some very dirty range brass. Then I set it out to dry over night. This is afer a quick run in the walnut and then decap and resize. The run in the walnut is more to protect my dies than anything else. BTW, I go my media at midway, but at only using two pounds, I think I would have been better off to use the link that gandog had for a two pound pack.

    Whoa, I decap FIRST, then run through the rotary. I like the nice shiny non sooty primer pockets. I decap the dirty brass with a Lee universal decapping die so I don't scratch up my sizing dies.

    I have the Thumler's B model with a 15 pound drum, so I use 5 pounds of media, 5 pounds of brass, and a gallon of water. 1/2 tablespoon of Lemi-shine and a squirt of Dawn.

  5. #25
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    Quote Originally Posted by gandog56 View Post
    Whoa, I decap FIRST, then run through the rotary. I like the nice shiny non sooty primer pockets. I decap the dirty brass with a Lee universal decapping die so I don't scratch up my sizing dies.

    I have the Thumler's B model with a 15 pound drum, so I use 5 pounds of media, 5 pounds of brass, and a gallon of water. 1/2 tablespoon of Lemi-shine and a squirt of Dawn.
    For if I ever get a rotary tumbler, can you effectively run smaller loads through it if you want to?

  6. #26
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    Quote Originally Posted by gandog56 View Post
    Whoa, I decap FIRST, then run through the rotary. I like the nice shiny non sooty primer pockets. I decap the dirty brass with a Lee universal decapping die so I don't scratch up my sizing dies.
    I just toss them into the walnut media for a bit, resize, then into the ss.

  7. #27
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    Quote Originally Posted by Mbaker78 View Post
    For if I ever get a rotary tumbler, can you effectively run smaller loads through it if you want to?
    Looks good to me. I have ran just a few with good results. May have to try just one.

  8. #28
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    Quote Originally Posted by jebsca View Post
    I just toss them into the walnut media for a bit, resize, then into the ss.
    I never used walnut. Corncob got them so much shinier.

  9. #29
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    Quote Originally Posted by gandog56 View Post
    I never used walnut. Corncob got them so much shinier.
    When I was first getting set up, the store had walnut, so I got that. Never tried the corn cob.

  10. #30
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    Quote Originally Posted by Taylor3006 View Post
    Anyone have a way to get old brown colored brass, brite and shiney again? I have a handfull of assorted calibers of range brass that just won't shine up at all with cob, walnut, nufinish, or Lemishine. Some of it I keep throwing back into the tumbler, probably has spent a week being tumbled and still nadda, just brown. I have reloaded brown brass before for my own use, never had any issues but this stuff is brass I want to trade for calibers I need. Any ideas?
    Tatlor, did you ever get your brass cleaned up?

  11. #31
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    Hmm, he said brown, but I'm wondering if it could have been laquered steel cases originally. I mean even a vibratory tumbler should have cleaned them somewhat.

  12. #32
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    Quote Originally Posted by gandog56 View Post
    Hmm, he said brown, but I'm wondering if it could have been laquered steel cases originally. I mean even a vibratory tumbler should have cleaned them somewhat.
    You may be on to something. Some of that laquered stuff looks like dirty range brass. That is one of the reasons I have a magnet on my reloading bench, and check every case.

  13. #33
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    Quote Originally Posted by jebsca View Post
    Based on what I have read, I try to put a pound each of ss media, brass, and water in each drum. I add a bit of dish soap and lemi-shine. I have played with the run time, and two hours looks about as good as it gets, even with some very dirty range brass. Then I set it out to dry over night. This is afer a quick run in the walnut and then decap and resize. The run in the walnut is more to protect my dies than anything else. BTW, I go my media at midway, but at only using two pounds, I think I would have been better off to use the link that gandog had for a two pound pack.
    What do you mean by this?

  14. #34
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    Quote Originally Posted by ZmanWakeForest View Post
    What do you mean by this?
    Probably to get any grit off of the cases so they don't score up the dies... I have a universal depriming die that I use before they even go into the tumbler instead of using the sizing die though.

  15. #35
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    Yeah, that's why I use a universal depriming die. The sides of the dirty cases do not rub against the inside of the die. But it sounds like jebsca deprimes AFTER he cleans them. I want them primer pockets squeaky, shiny clean. So they get deprimed, then cleaned.

  16. #36
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    Quote Originally Posted by ZmanWakeForest View Post
    What do you mean by this?
    As they pointed out, it is just to get dirt and stuff off the brass to help protect the dies. Other use a universal decapping die first, but I do not have one, so into the walnut first, resize and then into the ss.

  17. #37
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    I just traded a spare decapping die to somebody here......too bad.

  18. #38
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    Quote Originally Posted by gandog56 View Post
    I just traded a spare decapping die to somebody here......too bad.
    I don't know about too bad. I am getting on just fine without one. Have kicked it around a few times, but always find something else I want more.

  19. #39
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    But....but.....squeaky clean primer pockets!

    SANY0097_zps853f0655.jpg

  20. #40
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    Quote Originally Posted by gandog56 View Post
    But....but.....squeaky clean primer pockets!

    SANY0097_zps853f0655.jpg
    If they got into a wet tumbler after sizing then they still have the squeaky clean primer pockets...

    Makes sense to do it Jebsca's way though, saves one run through the tumbler I guess. I only have a vibratory tumbler thus far so I deprime, tumble, size and trim, tumble to remove sizing lube, then they get primed/loaded or whatnot depending on what I'm loading at the time.

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Abbreviations used in Reloading

BP Bronze Point IMR Improved Military Rifle PTD Pointed
BR Bench Rest M Magnum RN Round Nose
BT Boat Tail PL Power-Lokt SP Soft Point
C Compressed Charge PR Primer SPCL Soft Point "Core-Lokt"
HP Hollow Point PSPCL Pointed Soft Point "Core Lokt" C.O.L. Cartridge Overall Length
PSP Pointed Soft Point Spz Spitzer Point SBT Spitzer Boat Tail
LRN Lead Round Nose LWC Lead Wad Cutter LSWC Lead Semi Wad Cutter
GC Gas Check