





Macross wrote:After some more google'ing and replys here, I figured out what was going wrong. The tray I was laying them in the sun on had soapy residue on it still causing the cases to have tarnish marks all over them. I redid the batch with citric acid substituted, rinsed, dried off on towel, then into the oven on low for 20 mins. Problem solved. Thanks for suggestions guys.


deanp100 wrote:I went through all the same problems trying to get them to stay shiny. I am using a wet tumbler with stainless ball bearings . I tried various acid solutions and turned some pink, some cleaned beautifully and tarnished in minutes, some didn’t clean enough. Eventually found a sweet spot with less citric acid, some wash and wax car wash and a slightly longer tumbling time. Dump,them on a towel after rinsing, quick rub dry and then leave them in the sun and all is well again.


Stix wrote:deanp100 wrote:I went through all the same problems trying to get them to stay shiny. I am using a wet tumbler with stainless ball bearings . I tried various acid solutions and turned some pink, some cleaned beautifully and tarnished in minutes, some didn’t clean enough. Eventually found a sweet spot with less citric acid, some wash and wax car wash and a slightly longer tumbling time. Dump,them on a towel after rinsing, quick rub dry and then leave them in the sun and all is well again.
Are you willing to share the actual recipe you use...ie-quantities of ingredients..?...

in2anity wrote:Not that anyone is asking, but IMO shooters generally go overboard with their brass cleaning. A quick wipe down on the outside is enough to expose the splits, and ensure they cycle O-K. A touch of sizing wax to FLS, then wipe em again. Granted the carbon build up might be a little hard on your expander, but you can always scrape the mouth with a q-tip if you're so worried about your die. Anyway, if you use the collet die there's no scraping motion, only clamping - then no messy lubing at all required. And carbide dies in a straight-wall bypasses lubing also, for the most part at least - just FLS occasionally.

deanp100 wrote:I have being reloading for nearly 40 years and I cleaned my first case a year ago. Why, because it gives me something gun related to,do, and shiny ammo looks better. Looks are important for the modern hunter.


Wm.Traynor wrote:Fair go chaps! I'm not emotional; Really. Just wanna get my cases clean and I don't think a rag is all that efficient![]()
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Rwd22 wrote:Macross wrote:After some more google'ing and replys here, I figured out what was going wrong. The tray I was laying them in the sun on had soapy residue on it still causing the cases to have tarnish marks all over them. I redid the batch with citric acid substituted, rinsed, dried off on towel, then into the oven on low for 20 mins. Problem solved. Thanks for suggestions guys.
Glad you got it sorted mate, I spotted you collecting brass yesterdayTested out the first 9mm reloads yesterday and ran a few more through today, certainly alot more cost effective.



TassieTiger wrote:I put a few drops of baby oil in with my tumbling recipe, not enough to be able to see, feel or impede the process - but, I’ve never had tarnishing either...



Macross wrote:Rwd22 wrote:Macross wrote:After some more google'ing and replys here, I figured out what was going wrong. The tray I was laying them in the sun on had soapy residue on it still causing the cases to have tarnish marks all over them. I redid the batch with citric acid substituted, rinsed, dried off on towel, then into the oven on low for 20 mins. Problem solved. Thanks for suggestions guys.
Glad you got it sorted mate, I spotted you collecting brass yesterdayTested out the first 9mm reloads yesterday and ran a few more through today, certainly alot more cost effective.
Yeah it was great to get on the range again. Sorry if I didn't say gday inside. I didn't see you come in after saying hi in the car park but I kinda got into a zone... already reloaded all that lovely brass I picked up.OMG... im a brass goblin!
