Have knocked up a makeshift brass tumbler but no access to any tumbling media due to lockdown,have heard of people using rice or even kitty litter ,any truth to this is just more internet experts talking crap?
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Have knocked up a makeshift brass tumbler but no access to any tumbling media due to lockdown,have heard of people using rice or even kitty litter ,any truth to this is just more internet experts talking crap?
Have heard of kitty litter, but never used it. I did use rice for a while until switching to stainless media. The rice worked ok but gets quite dirty and I doubt if it would work for multiple polishes if liquid was added.
Yep I used rice and autosol in a rotary tumbler, it worked well tho rice is probably worth more than the brass ATM :D
Interesting topic. I'm fairly new to reloading. How important is it to have shiny brass? I went to a beginner's night at reloaders about a year ago and was told it's not important at all. So over not bothered. Sure I do a basic clean before I load, I've not had problems yet. Very interested to know the practical advantages to having shiny brass.
Doesn't matter - as long as you follow the same regime all the time. Consistency is the key for good reloading, shiny brass isn't.
Easier to find when you eject a case into longish grass.
Also I prefer to have shiny brass going into my dies, so there's less grit in there to get stuck between case and die and cause scratches.
Once you have scratches inside your die it shows up on every case that goes through afterwards.
Cheers for the information guys. That's something I will have a think about
It's also much much easier to inspect brass for damage/defects when it's clean
I shoot a lot of trail boss powder and it seems to dirty up the brass a lot more than usual.
yip TB is filthy