Order of Operations - Brass Prep for Reloading

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  • Опубликовано: 28 дек 2024

Комментарии • 126

  • @justinrush6620
    @justinrush6620 6 месяцев назад +22

    You should do a vid on dwell time in the sizing die. I'm curious to hear more about that.

    • @davidlong6796
      @davidlong6796 6 месяцев назад

      I never even thought of this...

    • @Hunter4Life.
      @Hunter4Life. 6 месяцев назад

      He actually has a vid on this. Not sure how long ago. I dwell for 15 seconds w/a timer. Sizing is exact as it can be with a caliper and shoulder bump gauge. Every time every piece if your die is set up correctly.
      Thanks for that valuable info Keith!

    • @bob4003
      @bob4003 6 месяцев назад +1

      No harm to the dies when putting the cases thru before cleaning them ?

    • @TexasTrained
      @TexasTrained Месяц назад

      .​@Hunter4Life. I can't believe Keith soes not clean his brass really gojd prior to Anealing so the carbon fuesnt get stuck in the neck while it is so so hot.

    • @ProjectArms4719
      @ProjectArms4719 Месяц назад

      I’d clean before annealing for the sake of keeping my sizing die a lil clean

  • @NiteQwill_
    @NiteQwill_ 6 месяцев назад +12

    As usual, appreciate the videos!
    A couple of things I caught on.
    The AMP annealer has an autostart function that allows it to start annealing once brass is placed into the pilot. This saves a little time since you don't need to press the START button every time. It is located under settings and is available on the newest firmware. Also, to speed up the annealing process, you can use TWO BRASS HOLDERS and literally double-fist the annealing process (load and go while the other holder is annealing). Absent an AMPMate, this dramatically reduces your time.
    Marking brass is helpful when done at the base of the cartridge, around the rim. Over time, you will get ink transfer to the chamber which may produce pressure issues or a pseudo-sticky bolt feeling. These issues are usually found in a wet environment where the case is wet, fired, and ink is transferred to the chamber. This also occurs when shooting in a humid environment (I'm looking at you Impact Foundation PRC and Texas matches...)
    Other reductions in time include using a die that will size AND mandrel at the same time: Short Action Customs Modular Sizing die with the mandrel (bought separately).
    Sharing my process, as I generally use an automated Dillon setup (I do have access to a Zero or Nexus, however I hate sitting at a bench):
    1. Clean in corncob mixed with NuFinish
    2a. Load hopper and decap using FW Arms Decapper (around 800-1200 rounds an hour)
    2b. Straight into AMP being fed by AMPMate (the key to get this to work is Dillon variable casefeeder on the SLOWEST setting)
    3. Resize using SAC die with mandrel after using One Shot
    4. As the resized brass falls into the bin, I pick that up and trim on Henderson
    5. (when ready) Feed brass into hopper again, prime, powder charge from dual Ingenuity Precision setups, bullet drop from feeder, bullet seating using SAC The Seating Die.
    I generally can load, for PRS, 300 rounds in 25-30 minutes. My limitations are filling the hopper and bullets fast enough.

    • @winninginthewind
      @winninginthewind  6 месяцев назад +1

      Wow! Great tip! I updated the AMP and that will save me some work. Thank you!

    • @NiteQwill_
      @NiteQwill_ 6 месяцев назад

      ​@@winninginthewind awesome! See you at the next match!

    • @sheldon_n
      @sheldon_n 6 месяцев назад +1

      @@winninginthewind All great tips above, agree 100% with not marking the case body and only mark the case rim or case head. I've had issues before too with sharpie transfer to the chamber. Other suggestions, check out corn cob blast media 20-40 grit, it's fine enough that it won't stick in flash holes and you'll save a step having to clean it out. For time savings, you may eventually end up with a Dillon. I've done all my brass prep on Dillons for years (550 and more recently 650). Deprime, size, mandrel all on one pass through. Very consistent sizing, very low runout.

    • @zsoltszotak7582
      @zsoltszotak7582 6 месяцев назад +1

      THANKS!!! Great comment!!!! I try the the autorun, it is working! Thanks again!

  • @lonz5.56
    @lonz5.56 6 месяцев назад +3

    I clean the brass first, anneal, lube and size, trim, wipe off lube, prime, charge and seat bullet. Great vid as always

    • @ericrumpel3105
      @ericrumpel3105 6 месяцев назад +3

      ....Copy that, when & if I anneal, I want the brass, (the necks) - inside AND out, to be ABSOLUTELY clean & free of carbon BEFORE annealing,....makes for MUCH more even annealing, thus - more even & consistent neck-tension

  • @ianxtreem
    @ianxtreem 6 месяцев назад +4

    Thanks very much. You are the best Guntuber on yt because you provide information over glitz! Good for you!

  • @bayfilly1
    @bayfilly1 Месяц назад

    De-burr primer holes? chamfer case mouth? Thanks for sharing your process !!

  • @andrewgarton5062
    @andrewgarton5062 6 месяцев назад +1

    Thanks very much for this info. Very useful for those of us looking for ways to improve.

  • @garysreloadingroom
    @garysreloadingroom 5 месяцев назад

    I appreciate that you don't dictate one process as the only process. I watched Greg's video, and it made a lot of sense, although my process is a bit different. I deprime, clean (wet with small SS pieces rather than pins), lube and full length size (w/o button), trim, clean again to remove any shavings from the trimming. In an effort to get more consistent bullet seating (and release), I dip the necks into Imperial Dry Neck Lube, and run over a neck mandrel. I then use a nylon brush to run through the necks. My thought is that it will distribute the Imperial Dry Neck Lube in a consistent manner to the inside of the necks. This will differ from Greg's process, and unfortunately I don't have an AMP press to determine if brushing the Dry Neck Lube actually results in consistent seating pressure, as I just have to go on "feel". My ES and SD's seem to indicate that the process is working, but who knows.

  • @arlissyoung8899
    @arlissyoung8899 6 месяцев назад +1

    I debur all of my flash holes on all my reloads even pistol then check / size the primer pockets. The amount of brass that comes out of deburring the flash holes is amazing sometimes.

  • @thepracticalrifleman
    @thepracticalrifleman 6 месяцев назад +11

    Are you no longer lubing necks?

    • @winninginthewind
      @winninginthewind  6 месяцев назад +4

      There is only one reason I lube necks, and that is to allow reseating of bullets after travel. That is limited to the 284 in F-Open. For everything else, I travel with fully prepped ammo.

    • @thepracticalrifleman
      @thepracticalrifleman 6 месяцев назад

      @@winninginthewind thanks for the info. 👍🏻

  • @scottoneil6795
    @scottoneil6795 6 месяцев назад +1

    Thanks, as always, for all the great content. I would advise a warning for folks who don't shoot fancy F-class guns with extremely tight/controlled tolerances: at least a light cleaning before putting range brass into a die may be advised. I know Erik Cortina also doesn't clean brass before sizing, but I've also known reloaders, who have ruined dies with scratches and stuck cases (THE worst way to spend time). I'd rather stay on the safe side and clean brass a bit too much, rather than too little. Shorter barrels, gas-impingement, and suppressors each magnify the need to clean brass. Just my 2 cents to help those of us on the less-experienced end of the reloading spectrum.

    • @Accuracy1st
      @Accuracy1st 6 месяцев назад

      I saw in the comments on his video where Erik C. said that if he ruins a sizing die, he'd rather just buy a new one and continue his process as is. I don't know if all these competition shooters feel the same way but I'm guessing they do?

    • @scottoneil6795
      @scottoneil6795 6 месяцев назад

      @@Accuracy1st Yeah, I recall that. I'm certainly not in that camp, and I just want to warn newbies that this is highly specialized advice. I try to incorporate these gentlemen's methods whenever possible, but not this one. 😆

    • @Accuracy1st
      @Accuracy1st 6 месяцев назад

      @@scottoneil6795 I'm not either. I keep my dies clean.

    • @Patrick-xd8jv
      @Patrick-xd8jv 6 месяцев назад

      When you shoot in a match, you take it out of the box, pull the trigger and put case back in the box, or on your mat. If the neck is sealing, the brass doesn’t get dirty

    • @scottoneil6795
      @scottoneil6795 6 месяцев назад +1

      @@Patrick-xd8jv Point taken. I'm not trying to 'debunk' Keith's methods; I'm offering input for less experienced shooters, possibly shooting gas guns with suppressors, on how to avoid mishaps with dirty (really dirty, not simply 'fired') brass. I think it's fair to say, "If your brass gets dirty (especially with something like sand), it should be cleaned BEFORE it goes into your sizing die."

  • @wyattlarsen3880
    @wyattlarsen3880 6 месяцев назад +2

    Dwell time. Important to those that know.

    • @Accuracy1st
      @Accuracy1st 6 месяцев назад +1

      For the past 30 years I have left the case in the sizing die several seconds.

  • @clays7741
    @clays7741 6 месяцев назад +8

    No big deal to size dirty brass? Die remains clean (enough)? Thank you for the video!

    • @ironDsteele
      @ironDsteele 6 месяцев назад +4

      That's a good point. I clean before sizing- and again after neck expanding to remove lube using a wet tumbler. I don't want filth in my dies.

    • @Accuracy1st
      @Accuracy1st 6 месяцев назад

      @@ironDsteele I like clean brass but I don't compete. These pros load so much they have to prioritize time. I've heard time and time again, many would just rather buy a new die. I clean my dies often but I have more time on my hands.

    • @levigne25
      @levigne25 6 месяцев назад +1

      Why size dirty brass ? I used to do that years ago , I could not stand the gritty grime mixed with lube inside my good quality dies . It’s also responsible for the longitudinal scratches on the necks .
      Clean brass equals clean lube and clean dies while sizing . Why expose your good quality dies to abrasive carbon .

    • @ironDsteele
      @ironDsteele 6 месяцев назад

      @@Accuracy1st That's completely understandable. With machining tolerances and resources they have I'm sure getting another die the same isn't an issue. I'm no pro either lol. I'm just having fun.

  • @stevenmarcus2709
    @stevenmarcus2709 5 месяцев назад

    Annealing first. Let me just say I believe this too be the most important key too the process for me. All the other stuff you really don’t have much choice in the matter because you can’t trim before sizing really. It literally brought my rifle too life. For years I chanced pretty annealing marks after tumbling and it really almost doubled my group sizes sometimes

  • @elliottlevitsky7105
    @elliottlevitsky7105 6 месяцев назад +1

    Can you go into more detail on the dwell time in the sizing die?

  • @Magnusintro
    @Magnusintro 6 месяцев назад +1

    Im similar, I decap, anneal, tumble, size. (The sizing die with depriming tool installed, no expander ball), then etc etc.
    Thought is less wear/tear on sizing die

  • @Berube1984
    @Berube1984 6 месяцев назад

    For me its wash , dry , anneal , lube with lanolin , decap , resize , mandrel , wash case lube off , dry , and 3 way trim with henderson ... about to try switching to dry tumbling cause double wash and dry is annoying

  • @skintimate
    @skintimate 6 месяцев назад +1

    Good follow up to the Primal Rights video. Also, are you adding anything to your corn cobb media?

    • @winninginthewind
      @winninginthewind  6 месяцев назад +1

      No, but I use it for long enough that it gets coated with case lube.

  • @hardball107
    @hardball107 6 месяцев назад

    I do basically the same thing except I neck turn the cases. Annealing ? That's like voodoo for consistency and placement for me. I've finally have a process I use because I'm an old NM shooter with barrels of 308 brass on hand and I convert it to 6.5Creedmoor but I've collapsed hundreds of cases experimenting with time, temp and placement on the shoulder but I think I have something that works and I resize with a .002"-.003" bump. Glad to see that quality brass can be readied without overthinking it.

    • @Accuracy1st
      @Accuracy1st 6 месяцев назад

      I have found that annealing and seating depth are among the most important aspects of excellent handloads

  • @stephenkrampert3430
    @stephenkrampert3430 6 месяцев назад

    Nice video funny how those processes get complicated and fairly simple again over the past 40 years !did notice can of Redding imperial sizing Wax leaning against the in line fabrication base is that for the necks?

    • @winninginthewind
      @winninginthewind  6 месяцев назад +1

      No, I use that for short-run situations where I don't want to use spray lube. Either works.

  • @charliebui7805
    @charliebui7805 6 месяцев назад

    Good video Keith.

  • @honeybadger4883
    @honeybadger4883 3 месяца назад

    de-prime
    tumble wash
    anneal
    mandrel
    size with neck bushing
    trim if necessary or run through brass station
    dry tumble to clean any residue
    bag with info note on all dimensions including tools used

  • @EDX2308
    @EDX2308 6 месяцев назад +3

    I wrote a large order of process I do and it was instantly removed. I deprime, stainless tumble, full length, prime, load powder charge and seat the b (I think this word caused the comment to auto remove).

  • @ProjectArms4719
    @ProjectArms4719 Месяц назад

    What are your thoughts about reloading precision ammo with a progressive press?

  • @donstanley8514
    @donstanley8514 Месяц назад

    Should the case be completed dry when you reload?, or should you use something like one shot and wait for it to dry.

  • @AlecksACe
    @AlecksACe 3 месяца назад

    Is there any logic behind trimming first and expanding necks after that or vice versa?

  • @brentpanneck1294
    @brentpanneck1294 6 месяцев назад

    Relatively new to reloading, but I thought that cleaning brass before sizing was preferred to avoid carbon or other "dirt" getting into the sizing die?

  • @bob4003
    @bob4003 Месяц назад

    Doesn’t “dirty” brass ruin your dies ?

  • @Rico11b
    @Rico11b 6 месяцев назад +1

    Annealing first yes, but no way would I put that dirty brass near my reloading room. My reloading room is the operating room and it has to be clean and sterile. I run my annealer in the garage, and then clean them. From there they go to reloading room to get the TLC they need for the next loading.

  • @charleshetrick3152
    @charleshetrick3152 6 месяцев назад

    I use a Giraud trimmer as well, I clean my lube off first. Do you get lube buildup in the cartridge holder? Super fast way to mark cases is with a spray can of Dyekem layout fluid.

    • @winninginthewind
      @winninginthewind  6 месяцев назад +1

      Great tip! There is some transfer, but since I always trim lubed cases, it doesn't cause any serious problems. I wipe them out with a cotton swab occasionally.

  • @chethaynes5802
    @chethaynes5802 6 месяцев назад

    Thank you very much

  • @223DIRTYDOG
    @223DIRTYDOG 6 месяцев назад

    Removing most/all of the inside neck carbon every time, and then adding dry lube (like NeoLube) before seating seems like a great way to control that variable. Did Greg test that?

  • @ArtisOutdoors
    @ArtisOutdoors 5 месяцев назад

    Why would you choose dry tumbling over ultrasonic cleaning ?

    • @wayne9903
      @wayne9903 3 месяца назад

      leaves some carbon in neck for resistance for bullet

  • @colloidalsilver1096
    @colloidalsilver1096 6 месяцев назад

    Great video

  • @RabbitSlayer48
    @RabbitSlayer48 6 месяцев назад

    Why trim then expand? I expand then trim. In my mind the oal is final and also the edge is chamfered so the mandrel should go in smooth and easy with no burrs.

  • @ironDsteele
    @ironDsteele 6 месяцев назад

    Thanks for sharing.

  • @bluekats777
    @bluekats777 5 месяцев назад

    3 hours in the tumbler 😳 ….I accidentally left mine in overnight and that was the end of my primer pockets - had to throw them all out - so its harsh way to clean if left in too long - im now switching to ultrasonic cleaning which can clean better in 10 minutes and not get bashed around

    • @wayne9903
      @wayne9903 3 месяца назад

      dont understand why it was the 'end of your primer pockets?' appreciate what I am missing...

    • @bluekats777
      @bluekats777 3 месяца назад

      @@wayne9903 hi Wayne - after leaving them in the tumbler all night accidentally it wore out the primer pockets - i was putting in the primers and they basically fell in - one of the brass i just tapped it on the bench and the primer fell out - so i use an ultrasound cleaner now using dishwashing liquid and a small amount of lemishine - but after resizing i do put them in the dry media to get the wax off for 15 to 20 minutes max

  • @shawnkemp2910
    @shawnkemp2910 6 месяцев назад

    So um.do we brush the necks,or is there a problem with that.

  • @Iscariot18
    @Iscariot18 6 месяцев назад +3

    Bolt action brass directly from the rifle isn't that dirty, but personally I can't get over sizing "dirty" brass in my dies. I even, up to this point, put the cases through a soap and water bath to remove any tumbling dust media, but I don't shoot very often and can afford to use up some time.
    Interestingly, any neck lubrication you have is taken away during cleaning, so nothing to help ease bullet seating. Thanks for the video, always fun to see what other people do.

    • @allalbavincero
      @allalbavincero 6 месяцев назад +1

      I guess why he lube/size/trim before tumbling is to remove the lube so he can reduce some potential seating problems. I myself might add one step using the compressed air to remove potential debris before the first step (annealing) though.

  • @95GTSpeedDemon
    @95GTSpeedDemon 6 месяцев назад

    I was wondering if sizing the neck after annealing but before cleaning would be an issue because of Any oxidation that happens during the process. I think that's how Primal rights said it.

    • @Accuracy1st
      @Accuracy1st 6 месяцев назад +1

      Yes. Pretty sure he indicated that. Annealing leaves an undesired texture inside and outside the neck that needs to be removed. I just can't remember if he indicated prior to sizing or prior to bullet seating.

  • @millsfamily4562
    @millsfamily4562 6 месяцев назад

    Do you find you don't need to inside/outside chamfer the necks after trimming, or does your trimmer perform those functions when it trims? Thanks.

    • @thomaskingsbury6560
      @thomaskingsbury6560 6 месяцев назад

      The trimmer does that as you trim. The Giraud trimmer is amazing. But like the primal rights primer tool a bit expensive.

    • @millsfamily4562
      @millsfamily4562 6 месяцев назад

      @@thomaskingsbury6560 Thanks, Thomas.

  • @dk17hmr
    @dk17hmr 6 месяцев назад

    Dwell time in the sizing die…….is it important?

  • @Aereaux
    @Aereaux 6 месяцев назад

    I must have missed it but when do you de-cap? During initial resizing or before? Or ?????

  • @toddb930
    @toddb930 6 месяцев назад

    You guys that tumble brass before resizing -- do you wipe off any media dust on the case before lubing and resizing?

    • @Accuracy1st
      @Accuracy1st 6 месяцев назад +1

      I didn't at first until I started seeing that dust/lube build up in the dies. Either way you'll add time to the process. You can wipe off or rinse off the dust before sizing, or you can size them dusty and just clean your dies after each batch. Or don't worry about it at all. I clean my dies frequently

  • @mmgee
    @mmgee 6 месяцев назад

    This is all so much different than Benchrest, we don’t ever anneal our brass nearly everyone runs Lapua Russian, we make up 20 new cases for a new barrel and use those cases for the life of the barrel which is around 2000 shots,which is needless to say we load at the matches

  • @ericstites9470
    @ericstites9470 5 дней назад

    Just watched this video to see a process that works - oddly enough it's the same way I just got started doing my twice-fired brass. 😁 I think after the first firing I annealed/cleaned/trimmed/cleaned again/sized. That was my first time ever doing it, so I'm glad my new sequence happens to be the same as yours!
    One thing I'm doing differently out of necessity for now, I'm running the expander ball down into the neck after full-length sizing (Hornady Match Grade dies). At least until I can get a couple more neck bushing sizes and some actual expander mandrels.

  • @howardschwartz1462
    @howardschwartz1462 6 месяцев назад

    When you say you use a dwell time for your sizing, could you be more specific?

  • @russsmith1450
    @russsmith1450 6 месяцев назад

    No brushing inside case neck at any time?

  • @greasegun1313
    @greasegun1313 6 месяцев назад

    If I guy wanted to dry tumble a little to get brass clean before sizing, would it matter if its done before annealing or after?

    • @winninginthewind
      @winninginthewind  6 месяцев назад +1

      No, I can't see a reason it would.

    • @greasegun1313
      @greasegun1313 6 месяцев назад

      @winninginthewind Thanks, and thanks for the concise video on the order of operations.

  • @JCJustice-kv2gy
    @JCJustice-kv2gy 6 месяцев назад

    Do you do that with brass that is shot out of ARs? May sound dumb asking but most my brass is very dirty after shooting with ARs. Hope you get time to answer👋👋👋

    • @winninginthewind
      @winninginthewind  6 месяцев назад

      I use range pickup brass in the 223. That stuff can be filthy. I do have to go above and beyond to get it clean, especially if it's been sitting in the rain a while.

  • @levigne25
    @levigne25 6 месяцев назад

    I could never see myself annealing dirty brass . After 1000’s of pieces of dirty brass in a period of a few years into the AMP annealer there will be pieces of carbon that will flake off and accumulate. I feel like a clean piece of brass will have a more consistent annealing .

  • @thomaskingsbury6560
    @thomaskingsbury6560 6 месяцев назад

    Do you use the primal rights primer tool?

  • @tomphillips2608
    @tomphillips2608 6 месяцев назад +1

    We took our granddaughter to see "Inside Out 2". After watching this vid, I feel like the "Anxiety" character.😂 Just kidding. Great content. It can't be easy being you , Keith.

  • @derrickmiller542
    @derrickmiller542 6 месяцев назад

    I'll aneal my brass now,before depriming.. First order of operation .makes sense.

    • @Accuracy1st
      @Accuracy1st 6 месяцев назад +1

      I've done it both ways, decap in a universal decap die that doesn't contact the case other than punching the primer out, then anneal and vice versa. I've seen no difference as long as both of these are steps 1 and 2.

  • @FullSendPrecision
    @FullSendPrecision 6 месяцев назад

    No neck lube for mandrel / loading?

  • @swamper2fly
    @swamper2fly 6 месяцев назад

    I decap,wet tumble, annealing, fl size, check length, mandrel the case neck _ .002, prime, load, bullet seat. Done

    • @Accuracy1st
      @Accuracy1st 6 месяцев назад

      Consider watching primal rights recent video on seating pressures as related to clean brass inside the neck

  • @JohnDavidHays
    @JohnDavidHays 6 месяцев назад

    Decapping?

    • @levigne25
      @levigne25 6 месяцев назад +1

      For the love of god hopefully the decapping is done with a dedicated decapping die and not a sizing die . Again decapping with a sizing die is another way to introduce grime and abrasive carbon to ones good quality dies .

    • @JohnDavidHays
      @JohnDavidHays 6 месяцев назад

      @@levigne25 myself I have a garage sale rescue RCBS press and all it does is decap. Gives the kids something to do.

  • @yalieangami6233
    @yalieangami6233 6 месяцев назад

    Aiwa 😘💕👍👍

  • @DanielReyes-hz1qk
    @DanielReyes-hz1qk 6 месяцев назад

    How much wear does full length sizing dirty brass cause on your dies? How often to you need to polish or replace them? I don't shoot all that often but I've got a batch I'll be shooting this weekend and might give the not cleaning until after sizing and trimming thing a go.

    • @winninginthewind
      @winninginthewind  6 месяцев назад +1

      In over 10 years of using these dies, I've never had to do anything to them or replace them. They are hardened steel, so a little grit isn't seeming to cause any harm.

    • @DanielReyes-hz1qk
      @DanielReyes-hz1qk 6 месяцев назад

      ​@@winninginthewindFantastic. Thank you sir for the reply

    • @Accuracy1st
      @Accuracy1st 6 месяцев назад

      Roughly every 50 rounds I wipe a sizing die out with a dry paper towel, then spray brake cleaner in it, wipe that out, then wet another paper towel with G96 synthetic oil and wipe it throughout the die, then dry paper towel again. Takes about 1 minute if that

  • @cav4353
    @cav4353 6 месяцев назад

    As a hobbyist long range and benchrest shooter and reloader for 30 years, I can admit when I'm out of my depth. Can anyone elaborate on case dwell time in the die.

    • @Accuracy1st
      @Accuracy1st 6 месяцев назад

      Brass flows, has spring back. When you size a piece of brass, say, the old fashion way, run it up, pull it out, you allow more flow/spring back immediately. When you run the case into the sizing die and leave it for several seconds (I'm anywhere from 6-10), you obviate the full potential of that brass flow and the goal is consistent shrinkage with much less flow

    • @Hunter4Life.
      @Hunter4Life. 6 месяцев назад

      15 seconds works for me

  • @P226Tex
    @P226Tex Месяц назад

    Why hell would you do all of that before you cleaned your cartridges.

  • @thadrobinson8343
    @thadrobinson8343 6 месяцев назад

    "Simple and straightforward" does not imply "quick and inexpensive."

  • @jameshudson7471
    @jameshudson7471 6 месяцев назад

    Anneal, size, trim.

  • @SigmaBallistics
    @SigmaBallistics 6 месяцев назад

    i'm surprised you haven't switched to rice yet!

  • @COSpacegunner
    @COSpacegunner 6 месяцев назад

    Why is everyone still using commercial case lubes??!! I use regular coconut oil (looks like shortening). A very slight amount is needed and it wipes off easily (heat above 80 F to make it even easier!) The residual oil that gets wiped off also cleans up any residual tumbling media dust and oxidation from the cases.
    Try coconut oil for your case lube and you will never go back to the sticky, stinky, messy, & expensive commercial lubes!

  • @beres70
    @beres70 6 месяцев назад

    So you're burning (bakeing) the dirt, sand etc., carbon buildup on the neck with annealing? I don't think that is a good thing...

  • @a_logical_conclusion
    @a_logical_conclusion 6 месяцев назад

    No need to chamfer? That's a big time suck for me... If I can avoid it I'm all ears!

    • @DanielReyes-hz1qk
      @DanielReyes-hz1qk 5 месяцев назад +1

      The Giraud trimmer chamfers the inside and outside of the cases when it trims

  • @luvtahandload7692
    @luvtahandload7692 6 месяцев назад +2

    Always clean brass BEFORE sizing. Pretty basic info right there. 🤦‍♂️

    • @johnplummer1619
      @johnplummer1619 6 месяцев назад

      Your not listening

    • @luvtahandload7692
      @luvtahandload7692 6 месяцев назад

      @@johnplummer1619 what did I miss? Video is about the order in which you do things. You don't run dirty, gritty, grimy brass into a die that has finer tolerances than wheel bearings. Unless you like ruining dies.

  • @DavidYoungclaus
    @DavidYoungclaus 6 месяцев назад

    An hour of steel pins saves you 2 hrs.

  • @TorchRed99FRC
    @TorchRed99FRC 6 месяцев назад

    Deprime
    Wet tumble with no pins
    Dry
    Size
    Trim/chamfer
    Prime
    Powder
    Press bullets

    • @TorchRed99FRC
      @TorchRed99FRC 6 месяцев назад

      Forgot about anealing before sizing and after wash