If you wet tumble brass

WVELK

WKR
Joined
Jul 2, 2020
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if you wet tumble your brass how do you dry it? Or, stated otherwise what is the easiest way? I hate waiting for it to dry before resizing.
 
I basically only shoot out of a bolt gun, and unless I’m hunting, the brass rarely hits the ground for me to worry about it being dirty and scratching my dies. YMMV.

So I size and deprime, and basically only tumble to get the lube off of it, shiny is cool too. Small batches I don’t bother tumbling, I just wipe them.

If it’s summertime, I wait until a nice hot sunny day to do it. I shake the crap out of every piece the get the majority of the water out, and lay them out in the sun in a cardboard box. I’ll shake it a couple of times if I remember. They’re usually dry in a couple of hours.

In the fall/winter/spring, I put them in a cardboard box and put them in front of the pellet stove. They dry really quickly that way.

I’ve also given them a quick stint in the tanning booth (the oven). Mumma doesn’t always appreciate it when I do that though.
 
It’s the only thing I know how to bake. My recipe is to shake as much water out as possible and then spread out on a cookie sheet. Bake for 30 min at 150F. Serve when cool enough to touch.
 
Food dehydrator they are super cheap, rinse brass in a strainer, dump on a towel kids roll them in a towel for a sec get the majority of water out. Then lay em out on a dehydrator tray.


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Why wet tumble vs. Dry with corncob media? I have always dry tumbled. Is wet tumbling better?
No it’s worse. It removes the carbon from inside the necks, which creates inconsistent neck tensions. Also it dings the shit out of the mouth of the case and ruins the chamfer depending on how long you do it. Dry tumble is much better. The cases just don’t look as nice on the outside.
 
Pretty much all I wet tumble is dirty range brass (which is just 9&10mm for me). To dry, I have a highly technical and well thought out system of dumping it out on a towel on my bench after running it through the media separator, then coming back later. Works great. Sometimes I’ll dry tumble rifle brass to get the lube off if it’s higher volume stuff (Dasher mostly, or 223/223 Ackley every 3rd or 4th firing, I use a collet neck sizer to avoid lube as much as I can on those)


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I used to wet tumble and just roll them in a beach towel and put them out in the sun. I was ready to go really quickly. I quit wet tumbling because my brass was too sticky. I was using stainless steel chips.
 
Why wet tumble vs. Dry with corncob media? I have always dry tumbled. Is wet tumbling better?
Well according to some it is a waste of time. However, I do like my brass super clean when going through the dies. I am not sure it is “better”, but it is different and the combo of wet before you resize and dry tumble after gets some really clean nice brass.
 
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