Gee I don't want to throw a wet towel so to speak on this topic. Been selling reloading equipment for 26 yrs and reloading for 45 yrs.
All is needed is clean brass for reloading. No need for pretty shiney brass just remove the dirt so you don't scratch and ruin you dies.
Any tumbler with any dry media will work. Just add a media agent for faster cleaning. About one hour time is all that's need to remove the dirt. In my mind walnut doesn't do a better job or is faster as I only want to remove the dirt and don't need shiney new looking brass. Hell you gun won't know the differance anyway. If shiney turns you on well just go for it.
Forget about cleaning the flash holes. If you decap the primer 1st you just ran a dirty case through your die and risked ruining the die. If you do decap 1st then you will end up with a piece of media in every damn flash hole you will have to pick out.
We sell used brass and use a cement mixer and the brass comes out looking near new with dry media with a activator added.
I would never use or sell jewler rouge. I wouldn't even give it free to a enemy (well maybe couple). The damn stuff never really comes off the brass and about 10,000 rounds run through a carbide die will polish the carbide die oversize and cause function problems.
Don't mean to step on any toes but 45 yrs of reloading and selling the equipment I have picked up a lot of good ideas. But hey if it works for you another way go for it.
The best reloading press for the hobby reloader would have to be the Lee Turret 4 hole press. You can use it as a single stage press and when used as a semi-progressive press you can load 200-300 per hour. The quality of the ammo is the same.
I load all my ammo on a Dillon 1050 and can load 1000 per hour of 223 Rem. and get sub one inch accuracy. Pistol ammo is done on a Dillon 550 and can load 400 per hour. I use a Dillon 650 on larger rifle and get sub one inch accuracy.
I need quality and quanity in ammo reloading. And I have found it.
All is needed is clean brass for reloading. No need for pretty shiney brass just remove the dirt so you don't scratch and ruin you dies.
Any tumbler with any dry media will work. Just add a media agent for faster cleaning. About one hour time is all that's need to remove the dirt. In my mind walnut doesn't do a better job or is faster as I only want to remove the dirt and don't need shiney new looking brass. Hell you gun won't know the differance anyway. If shiney turns you on well just go for it.
Forget about cleaning the flash holes. If you decap the primer 1st you just ran a dirty case through your die and risked ruining the die. If you do decap 1st then you will end up with a piece of media in every damn flash hole you will have to pick out.
We sell used brass and use a cement mixer and the brass comes out looking near new with dry media with a activator added.
I would never use or sell jewler rouge. I wouldn't even give it free to a enemy (well maybe couple). The damn stuff never really comes off the brass and about 10,000 rounds run through a carbide die will polish the carbide die oversize and cause function problems.
Don't mean to step on any toes but 45 yrs of reloading and selling the equipment I have picked up a lot of good ideas. But hey if it works for you another way go for it.
The best reloading press for the hobby reloader would have to be the Lee Turret 4 hole press. You can use it as a single stage press and when used as a semi-progressive press you can load 200-300 per hour. The quality of the ammo is the same.
I load all my ammo on a Dillon 1050 and can load 1000 per hour of 223 Rem. and get sub one inch accuracy. Pistol ammo is done on a Dillon 550 and can load 400 per hour. I use a Dillon 650 on larger rifle and get sub one inch accuracy.
I need quality and quanity in ammo reloading. And I have found it.