I thought the brass in my post looked pretty clean.I like the brass clean. Seems to help keep my die and chamber clean.
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I only tumble every 3-4th firing. Otherwise I just resize and wipe off the brass, clean the flash hole and check length. I only trim every 3-4 firings too. I'm not a bench rest shooter - just a hunter. I only need to hit a 6-8" circle at 400 yards. Beyond that I don't really care what happens because it's too far for me to shoot anyway.For those of you not tumbling fired brass before reloading what is your process? I have heard a few guys say they dont tumble and that that have not seen any reason to do it as their accuracy has been great.
I tumble it. I've found that if brass gets too tarnished it seems to collect more debris. It also is not as "slick" on that outside. It makes for chambering, unchambering and putting them through my dye easier.
This is another thing I forgot to hit on. After I anneal my brass it can be discolored. So I tumbled it and resize and then closely inspect the necks at the shoulder junction. So.eyimes necks don't split completely and only have a slight crack at the neck/shoulder transition.The biggest benefit to clean brass when reloading is being able to "read" the brass. Other possible benefit is it will keep your chamber a bit cleaner.
Yours is. Mine never looks like that after several years in a box and also being on multiple trips. If mine looked like that I wouldn't bother tumbling it either.I thought the brass in my post looked pretty clean.
It is faster to do by hand than to dig the brass out of the tumbler, not to mention eliminating the wait while tumbling.I don't understand those that spend time wiping the brass by hand with steel wool or what have you but think that tumbling is a waste of time. Seems much simpler to dump the brass in a tumbler then go post memes on RS for an hour or so.