alexander45
Member
Have you been using the liquid auto polish trick to keep the dust down
Allen One1 wrote:
Revelation 19:11
And I saw heaven opened, and behold, a white horse, and He who sat on it is called Faithful and True, and in righteousness He judges and wages war.
total recoil wrote:
I'm confused....... If I'm tumbling brass with my vibratory machine, where does the lead come from?
When it comes to all steps of reloading don't be cheap and cut corners and you will always have good loads that won't cause you trouble or embarrass you at the range. From case cleaning to final crimp on your loads and logging what you have done. Its a lot to do but, at the end of the day you won't be sorry you stayed the course.So I just recently started tumbling a few months ago. I tumble in my attic as that is my gun and reloading room. I use a Thumler's Tumbler Rotary tumbler. It does a good job, and it is totally sealed. In fact it is a rock tumbler and meant for wet tumbling. However, being cheap, I don't have a media separator. I've just been picking the brass out by hand and tossing the clean brass in a container.
Me thinks I need to be less frugal, less stupid, and more thoughtful with this practice.
I don't shoot much indoors, but I will pick up a media separator this weekend, and recover my clean brass outdoors from now on. Maybe I'll start wearing some disposable gloves when reloading too. I just got my powder throw set up last night, so I just need to get the primer feeder set up and I'm ready to role.
Well when I do buy equipment, I don't skimp. Dillon 55b, Dillon Powder Scale, Thumler's Tumbler, Carbide Dies, RCBS Bullet Puller, Hornady and Lyman reloading manuals, with more coming. I know there is more equipment I'll be buying, like a case trimmer and digital scale and , well the list goes on. I just need to convince myself I need something first...........When it comes to all steps of reloading don't be cheap and cut corners and you will always have good loads that won't cause you trouble or embarrass you at the range. From case cleaning to final crimp on your loads and logging what you have done. Its a lot to do but, at the end of the day you won't be sorry you stayed the course.