I just bought this unit. Found your video. The rough edges you are feeling is the soft material being bumped against each other as they are being cleaned. Thanks for posting this!
Use lemi shine and dawn just like with the pins (only for brass) after 20 min shiny, no pins to fight. I universal deprime the cases first and the drain fast, the roll the cases up in a tower and shake back and forth, no water spots
I have this but with analog dials. Works pretty well. Cleans small gun parts really quick and easy. Would recommend to anyone tired of cleaning by hand.
I was hunting brass for my CZ527. I bought a box of Lapua before the craziness but wanted more. Star Line had their 7.62x39 on backorder last month. I made my order and it shipped three days later, I was lucky. The price for 250 pieces was nice.
Good video Johnny. The best tip I can give for ultrasonic carbon removal is head on down to the local wallyworld and pick up a gallon of Superclean. I am in amazement every time I use the stuff on brass, gas-operated rifle parts, and anything else you can think of wanting carbon dissolved. Best of all, it's really cheap stuff. Like 10 bucks a gallon type of cheap! You could add ~1/2 to 1 full cup to a gallon of water and you'll be shocked at well it works! Just remember to get a thin layer of oil on ferrous parts afterward because Superclean is gonna strip lube right off of everything.
The way I used to clean the brass with these is some dishwasher liquid and a pinch of Citric acid. Just a .22 case powder do about 1ltr solution. They come shiny as. But could get some dark spot time to time. Then I dried them in a food dryer. Much easier to process in batches.
That brass came out clean enough for my loading. Can't wait for 7.62x39. I've been doing some messing around with 160ish Lee 310 cast bullets PC'd with SW Blackout. Even with light charges, my brass is MIA, that thing slings brass into the next county.
Johnny, I appreciate and trust your Judgment when it comes to product reviews, many products you have run through your reviews have turned out to be more than to be expected for the price the consumer paid. also, you give great console in their drawbacks and evaluations. when you say "Don't buy this", I trust what you are saying because you explained why. Keep up your good work, people Trust you dude. -Dave
I use a mix of dawn dish soap and two cap fulls of Lyman brass cleaning concentrate and it works great. Mine is only a small one can only fit about 50 pieces of 6mm Creedmoor in it at a time but it works awesome.
For brass, Hornady solution seems to clean best but requires rinsing like most solutions. RCBS brass solution doesn’t need rinsing and coats with a non-tarnish finish. I also use rcbs weapons cleaner solution for dies as it does not require rinsing and also coats with a preservative.
I want to think this video was made based on my suggestions from awhile back ;) a little ultrasonic trick to avoid dirtying the water in the tub: put an item to be cleaned into a Ziploc bag filled with cleaning solution. ultrasonic waves will work through the bag just fine and you don't have to rinse/clean out tube as much.
That's why I deprime the cases before ultrasonic bath, so it's easier to drain the water out plus don't muddy up the water from the spent primer. I use the RCBS ultrasonic which is over $100 but I bought used from a friend.
I use an ultrasonic cleaner from Harbor freight once in a while. They have their own cleaning powder for it, seems to work ok for my needs. I don't use it on brass though, usually just AR BCG and stuff like that.
Pretty neat video I use super clean on lots of car parts, floors etc. and it does a good job for that stuff. Super clean is about 8 bucks per gallon and it’s concentrated but they actually recommend using it with cold water. BTW I have never used it to clean gun parts in a ultrasonic machine but if I had one I would try it.
ADMONITION!! For an ultrasonic solution for 9mm brass and a batch that size, I use a few drops of dish soap and a shot glass of white vinegar. 20-30 minutes and I'm happy with the results. I bought a used US made dental ultrasonic cleaner (with no heater) about the same size as they have a great record of reliability and life.
I use the Hornady One Shot Sonic stuff, terribly expensive but a little goes a long way and it does a really good job. Cases are of course deprimed to begin with, and I usually cook them at 60C for half an hour, and reuse the solution maybe 3 times, it’s usually grey and opaque at that point.
Use lemi shine and 7 drops or so of dawn ultra and after that run a new bath with teaspoon of baking soda and you will be amazed on how much more you will get out. Also I've found mixing the brass while in the bath will help with them all get clean. Generally depending on size of case I only put 40 to pieces in at a time. In regards to 243 cases. Less time and come out cleaner.
My wife made me a "tumbler" bag for the Frankfort wet tumbler. I tie the bag over the mouth of the tumbler and dump all the brass into the bag. She placed draw strings on the top of the bag so I could tumble the brass around w/o losing a single case. I shake and move the brass around and most of the water is removed. Let the cases air dry for a day or two and it's ready to reload. Hang the bag up to dry.
I bought the same cleaner a year ago. Does a great job on gun parts and small carburetors. Does take forever to get up to temp. Get a tea infuser for really small parts.
When I used to use an ultrasonic cleaner for brass I would reuse old solution many times over to save money and my unit did not have a heater built in. I had an old cookpot that lost all of its non stick coating so I dedicated it for use to heat up the solution prior to use. A few minutes on the stove and it was plenty warm.
I have a different ultrasonic cleaner. Mine is basically the same as the RCBS just not green and doesn’t say RCBS on it. I learned that if you want the best cleaning action only stack the cases one layer deep. No piling on top of each other.
The other thing you need to look out for with these is if they make a smaller one, the bigger one may use the same power unit so it won't have enough power to clean the whole tank
You might want to try Krud Kutter inside your ultrasonic cleaner. This has been a wonder cleaner, although I do not have an ultrasonic cleaner for myself.
Try a trick I saw a mechanic uses. Just tap water in the reservoir but place the parts to clean in a zip lock bag with the cleaning solution. The ultrasonic won’t care but it keeps small parts separated and the machine clean. He uses it to keep bolts separated for cleaning. For brass I use a 9 mm case of lemishine with a small squirt of dawn and run it for 24 min. Never any longer, and be sure to rinse well. The acidic lemishine will leach zinc out of the brass if left in to long.
Hi Johnny! I have the 3lt and have found it does the job pretty well! Was using a dry tumble before and got fed up with having to de-gunk the primer holes! Funny but I put the brass back in the dry media to clean off the resizing lube😂 Here in the U.K. I just use regular washing up liquid (Fairy) and hot water from the tap and always put it on for the full 30 min, as for the sound it get under your skin doesn’t it?! I also use it to clean my wildcat moderators, but need to do a bit more research as there is always carbon left after x2 runs. Many thanks for all your hard work bring us these videos, much appreciated 👍 regards from deepest Dorset England.
Sometimes it helps to run distilled water vs tap water, I can't remember exactly why. It also helps to run an ultrasonic unit for 10-15 minutes before you start cleaning anything to degas the solution. It helps remove gases dissolved in the water that can buffer the sound waves and limit the cleaning action.
My dad got a harbor freight ultrasonic for cleaning brass and small parts. We keep the tank full of just water then put the parts or brass in a ziplock with the cleaning solution. Been working well and you can use fun solvents like wd40👍
I’ve used the RCBS solution and it worked well. Paid too much for the RCBS branded cleaner and the heating element quit just after they warranty expired.
I have a VEVOR 6L and it takes forever to heat the solution without running the ultrasonic. It does heat eventually, but my results are the same as yours. I'm looking for a better heating element. I made a basket to go in the basket out of 1/8 hardware cloth, works well. I use a metal tea steeper ball thing for tiny parts.. works wonders on carburators!
I wonder if you could stick a Soud Vide wand into the bath to bring up the temp faster. My wife has one of them for cooking meat. I have been thinking of buying this Ultrasonic cleaner but the bad reviews.
@@texpatriot8462 Running the ultrasonic unit and the heater at the same time would warm up the solution faster. It would also help degas the solution before you drop any parts in.
Ultrasonic cleaning of brass: dishwashing liquid and 1 teaspoon of citric acid (lemishine). You can also use dishwasher detergent, but it seems to leach zinc from the brass. I usually go about 45 minutes, but I have a smaller unit. The heater isn’t really necessary, water will heat up due to the action of the transducer. The change in feeling of the brass is probably the lubricant/coating being stripped or the lack of lubricant from dry tumbling.
I believe there is a bit of acid in the commercially available brass cleaning solutions. He put wayyyyy too much in there so it was probably etching the brass.
@@silentbob267 There is, but it is a low concentration weak acid (usually citric). You would need a highly concentrated solution and far longer soak time (although heating helps accelerate the process) to etch the brass. Also, the acid leaches the zinc from the brass and makes it change color first. More likely it is either removal of a coating or simple mechanical scratching.
@@detritus23 You do realize that Brass Juice he poured in is a concentrated acid solution and the reason it says to mix 1ounce to 60ish ounces of water is to dilute the acid to a level that is relatively safe for the brass right?
@@silentbob267 I do. However, the acids is most brass washes are dilute, weak acids, so unless he soaked them for a long time, I don’t think it would etch the brass noticeably. Also, the brass was not discolored, which would definitely indicate acid etching. Could it be etching the metal? Sure. Under the right conditions, it might even leach and plate the copper onto the ultrasonic cleaners tub. But my experience working with acids, suggests otherwise under the conditions and time used. (Also, he was barehanded and acid strong enough to etch brass in 5 minutes would minimally stained his hands or given mild burns.) Unfortunately, I cannot find a MSDS for the cleaner to comment further. If I can find the specific acids used and their concentrations, then I may have to revise my opinion.
Johnny, I get a lot of once fired brass and some times new from Diamond K Brass in Scottsdale Arizona. Check them out and see if Jeremiah has what your looking for. Love your videos and hope to see more soon.
They seem like a good company, gotten a few bags from them and they were in good shape with extras. Including a random 8x22 Nambu in one bag of .32. That was a wierd one, but it added to my case collection, so I was pretty pleased.
@@gresvig2507 I’ve had great luck buying brass from them and like you said I’ve always received more than what I paid for. They are very careful not to short you and I’ve bought a lot of rifle and pistol brass. What’s good for me is I live in Cochise county AZ so my orders get here fast but they do ship orders quickly anyway. Good Shooting
Might want to keep an eye what you clean with what solution. I like the Sonic Cleaner a lot, but it will rust the bolt carrier key screws. It also does something to the nitrided bolt carrier finish.
I have several ultrasonic cleaners and use them regularly for cleaning brass. They are the quickest and most efficient way to clean brass. I good ultrasonic will clean brass inside and out including the primer pockets in under 10 mins. My advice when looking to buy an ultrasonic is to look at the power of the transducers (usually either 50W or 60W) and the number of transducers. Then calculate the power and number of transducers per litre of water. Some sizes will have a better ratio than others. The 3L and 6L models with 60W/1.5L or 60W/2L could work better than the larger 10L models which might only have 60W/2.5L for example.
Cosmoline melts between 113-125 degrees. When I got my Garands , I took them apart and dumped everything into a big pot of boiling water. Came right off. And Simple Green is fine, but don’t use the standard green stuff. Use either the Purple or even better the Aircraft version of it. They’re safe on all metals. The green attacks aluminum
Would I be right in saying that those components are from an SKS rifle? PS: I wrote this before seeing the shot of the whole rifle. Seems obvious later in the video.
mine died after 4 uses and that is because it was leaking water into the electronics. it worked well when it did though. I use the hornady brass cleaner and gun parts cleaner. I will say this though, DONT MIX THE PARTS AND BRASS CLEANER SOLUTIONS! I did try and cut corners by cleaning a few gun parts with my brass and it destroyed the nickel boron finish on them. That said, i really like the hornady brand brass cleaner. Just for giggles, you should try the PINOL mountain scented one on there too. the two smell oddly alike. The one thing i dont like is that primer pockets are always a pain to clean with the ultrasonic cleaners. Hopefully you test a good brand i can have better luck with. Thanks for a good video man! love it! Oh and now i use the lyman one. MUCH MUCH quieter and the performance is about the same as the model you are testing right now. worth the extra 20 dollars if you ask me
@@silentbob267 i do. doesnt seem to matter though. still hard to get in there. usually i need to go in with a cotton swab to clean them out but that is annoying when you have already taken the brass for a good 10 minutes in the ultrasonic
@@orozcocris93 Haha I used to keep running mine until it was as clean as I wanted it to be. Sometimes I would have batches of brass running 30-45 minutes total time to reach the desired level of clean. Obviously this varies from one unit to the next and the amount of brass but. Try running yours a few more cycles and see if that doesn't help.
Best brass solution is 2 teaspoons of dawn dish soap and 2 tablespoons of Lemishine in your water Let run for 20 minutes and your brass will look like new
@@feetoorourke7152 I know about them but never seen them around my area. This is what I’m trying to duplicate. Deer season is almost here. I’ve loaded some 150 Speer Hot-Cor. (.311) Next I’ll load my round noses. (.308)
Pinch of citric acid, dawn and water. To keep the mess out of the tank and from having to clean it alot I put the brass/cleaning mixture in Mason jars and put water in the tank around em. Gun parts I do in stainless "food" pans with hoppes no9 poured in from a quart bottle. Using a separate container let's me pour back into the bottle. I will look into the simple green though.
I use White Oak Armament 18" SPR barrels and they are amazing. Check my 223 playlist for specific videos about them and a bunch of examples of insane accuracy.
Very hot shower while the wife is away will get rid of 95% of the Cosmoline , did this to most of my SKS , the stock need to baked at the sun for few days after .
I never used one Johnny, but if I had the machine, I would used baking soda, vinegar, some distilled water (mix the baking soda in first with a cup or cup and 1/2) dawn dish soap to soak the brass for 20 mins. then I would give them a good ultra sonic boiling? Just my opinion ?????? Hey water is the main ingredient to fill the machine
Using baking soda and vinegar at the same time would be ineffective as the baking soda would neutralize the acidity of the vinegar. I have heard of using a baking soda wash afterwards to ensure the vinegar is neutralized and doesn't continue eating on the brass after it is removed from solution though.
@@silentbob267 true it would neutralize the acidity of the acid. But, a little baking soda goes a long way to reduce the acidity to make it mild to your brass. I didnt say go wild with baking soda. In making the suggestion I had confidence that we all understood that.
@@jerrymont2595 You weren't very clear on your mix ratios but if your only reason for adding the baking soda is to weaken the acid of the vinegar would it not make more practical sense to skip the baking soda and just use less vinegar and allow the water you are mixing it to to dilute the acid?
You can reuse the solution quite a few times. I used to drain mine into an old juice container when I was done cleaning and let the heavier particles settle out. When I needed to clean again I would decant into an old cook pot and heat it up on the stove. If I started running low on fluid I would top it up with a little distilled water and a few drops of cleaning solution. It lasts a long time like that, eventually it will reach the point where it stops cleaning as quickly. Then I would dispose of the old stuff and start with a fresh batch.
Nice video and very informative, makes me want to replace my smaller Hornsby brand ultrasonic… One note, I found using the Simple Green HD Pro to be better and more compatible with various metals.
Why was the video taken down the first time?
The upload was corrupted and the picture froze at around the 10 minute mark. I had to delete and re-upload. Sorry about the confusion!
@@JohnnysReloadingBench I was able to see the entire video the first time that's why I asked
I just bought this unit. Found your video. The rough edges you are feeling is the soft material being bumped against each other as they are being cleaned. Thanks for posting this!
Thx! I was looking for a review of a budget model, yours did the job!
Use lemi shine and dawn just like with the pins (only for brass) after 20 min shiny, no pins to fight. I universal deprime the cases first and the drain fast, the roll the cases up in a tower and shake back and forth, no water spots
I have this but with analog dials. Works pretty well. Cleans small gun parts really quick and easy. Would recommend to anyone tired of cleaning by hand.
I really like the Frankfort Arsenal brass cleaner solution works well in a tumbler with warm water and dish soup
Good to see, I bought a similar unit, feel assured it will deliver
I was hunting brass for my CZ527. I bought a box of Lapua before the craziness but wanted more. Star Line had their 7.62x39 on backorder last month. I made my order and it shipped three days later, I was lucky. The price for 250 pieces was nice.
I use Berrymans Chem Dip for my brass in my US Cleaner. It does a really good job at clearing out carbon.
That brass looks good. Simple green works fine.
I got the 10l and I use it for parts a lot. I left a 1911 in a wet backpack for 2 months and it cleaned it right up for cerakote
Good video Johnny. The best tip I can give for ultrasonic carbon removal is head on down to the local wallyworld and pick up a gallon of Superclean. I am in amazement every time I use the stuff on brass, gas-operated rifle parts, and anything else you can think of wanting carbon dissolved. Best of all, it's really cheap stuff. Like 10 bucks a gallon type of cheap! You could add ~1/2 to 1 full cup to a gallon of water and you'll be shocked at well it works! Just remember to get a thin layer of oil on ferrous parts afterward because Superclean is gonna strip lube right off of everything.
I have this same one, works great. I use dawn and lemishine and I wove zip ties in the basket to make the openings smaller
I wouldn't have thought of that... Nice. Would wire mesh from a screen door work as well..?
The way I used to clean the brass with these is some dishwasher liquid and a pinch of Citric acid. Just a .22 case powder do about 1ltr solution. They come shiny as. But could get some dark spot time to time. Then I dried them in a food dryer. Much easier to process in batches.
TRUE! If I just throw my bolt carrier in a parts cleaner that would be insanely easy… might start doing that
That brass came out clean enough for my loading. Can't wait for 7.62x39. I've been doing some messing around with 160ish Lee 310 cast bullets PC'd with SW Blackout. Even with light charges, my brass is MIA, that thing slings brass into the next county.
Johnny, I appreciate and trust your Judgment when it comes to product reviews, many products you have run through your reviews have turned out to be more than to be expected for the price the consumer paid. also, you give great console in their drawbacks and evaluations. when you say "Don't buy this", I trust what you are saying because you explained why. Keep up your good work, people Trust you dude. -Dave
Great review, I have an ultrasonic cleaner but rarely use it
I use a mix of dawn dish soap and two cap fulls of Lyman brass cleaning concentrate and it works great. Mine is only a small one can only fit about 50 pieces of 6mm Creedmoor in it at a time but it works awesome.
For brass, Hornady solution seems to clean best but requires rinsing like most solutions. RCBS brass solution doesn’t need rinsing and coats with a non-tarnish finish. I also use rcbs weapons cleaner solution for dies as it does not require rinsing and also coats with a preservative.
I want to think this video was made based on my suggestions from awhile back ;)
a little ultrasonic trick to avoid dirtying the water in the tub: put an item to be cleaned into a Ziploc bag filled with cleaning solution. ultrasonic waves will work through the bag just fine and you don't have to rinse/clean out tube as much.
Lyman has an ultrasonic solution specifically for brass. It's not cheap, but you don't need much and it works really well
That's why I deprime the cases before ultrasonic bath, so it's easier to drain the water out plus don't muddy up the water from the spent primer. I use the RCBS ultrasonic which is over $100 but I bought used from a friend.
I'd love a video of your new SKS there, brother!!!
I use an ultrasonic cleaner from Harbor freight once in a while. They have their own cleaning powder for it, seems to work ok for my needs. I don't use it on brass though, usually just AR BCG and stuff like that.
I've had good luck with the plain old Hornady brass cleaner concentrate.
Lemishine and a couple of drops of dish washing soap as a wetting agent. Works pretty good!
Pretty neat video I use super clean on lots of car parts, floors etc. and it does a good job for that stuff. Super clean is about 8 bucks per gallon and it’s concentrated but they actually recommend using it with cold water. BTW I have never used it to clean gun parts in a ultrasonic machine but if I had one I would try it.
ADMONITION!! For an ultrasonic solution for 9mm brass and a batch that size, I use a few drops of dish soap and a shot glass of white vinegar. 20-30 minutes and I'm happy with the results. I bought a used US made dental ultrasonic cleaner (with no heater) about the same size as they have a great record of reliability and life.
I use lemi shine and dawn dish soap. After they are dried I put them in a tumbler for about an hour
This is peaking my interest--would love to see what you can do with an SKS!
I use the Hornady One Shot Sonic stuff, terribly expensive but a little goes a long way and it does a really good job. Cases are of course deprimed to begin with, and I usually cook them at 60C for half an hour, and reuse the solution maybe 3 times, it’s usually grey and opaque at that point.
Use lemi shine and 7 drops or so of dawn ultra and after that run a new bath with teaspoon of baking soda and you will be amazed on how much more you will get out. Also I've found mixing the brass while in the bath will help with them all get clean. Generally depending on size of case I only put 40 to pieces in at a time. In regards to 243 cases. Less time and come out cleaner.
My wife made me a "tumbler" bag for the Frankfort wet tumbler. I tie the bag over the mouth of the tumbler and dump all the brass into the bag. She placed draw strings on the top of the bag so I could tumble the brass around w/o losing a single case. I shake and move the brass around and most of the water is removed. Let the cases air dry for a day or two and it's ready to reload.
Hang the bag up to dry.
I bought the same cleaner a year ago. Does a great job on gun parts and small carburetors. Does take forever to get up to temp. Get a tea infuser for really small parts.
When I used to use an ultrasonic cleaner for brass I would reuse old solution many times over to save money and my unit did not have a heater built in. I had an old cookpot that lost all of its non stick coating so I dedicated it for use to heat up the solution prior to use. A few minutes on the stove and it was plenty warm.
Start with hot water from the tap.
I have a different ultrasonic cleaner. Mine is basically the same as the RCBS just not green and doesn’t say RCBS on it. I learned that if you want the best cleaning action only stack the cases one layer deep. No piling on top of each other.
The other thing you need to look out for with these is if they make a smaller one, the bigger one may use the same power unit so it won't have enough power to clean the whole tank
You might want to try Krud Kutter inside your ultrasonic cleaner. This has been a wonder cleaner, although I do not have an ultrasonic cleaner for myself.
Try a trick I saw a mechanic uses. Just tap water in the reservoir but place the parts to clean in a zip lock bag with the cleaning solution. The ultrasonic won’t care but it keeps small parts separated and the machine clean. He uses it to keep bolts separated for cleaning.
For brass I use a 9 mm case of lemishine with a small squirt of dawn and run it for 24 min. Never any longer, and be sure to rinse well. The acidic lemishine will leach zinc out of the brass if left in to long.
Enjoying all the these new videos. How's your chickens doing?
Hi Johnny! I have the 3lt and have found it does the job pretty well! Was using a dry tumble before and got fed up with having to de-gunk the primer holes! Funny but I put the brass back in the dry media to clean off the resizing lube😂 Here in the U.K. I just use regular washing up liquid (Fairy) and hot water from the tap and always put it on for the full 30 min, as for the sound it get under your skin doesn’t it?! I also use it to clean my wildcat moderators, but need to do a bit more research as there is always carbon left after x2 runs. Many thanks for all your hard work bring us these videos, much appreciated 👍 regards from deepest Dorset England.
Sometimes it helps to run distilled water vs tap water, I can't remember exactly why. It also helps to run an ultrasonic unit for 10-15 minutes before you start cleaning anything to degas the solution. It helps remove gases dissolved in the water that can buffer the sound waves and limit the cleaning action.
Thank you for sharing.
An easy mix for the brass is regular water, just add a healthy dose of white vinnegar and tiny squirt of dawn dish soap.
I bought the 6L version of the same machine . Have only used it for brass cleaning sofar. Seems worth the $100 it cost.
Got yourself a sks Johnny. Congrats
My dad got a harbor freight ultrasonic for cleaning brass and small parts. We keep the tank full of just water then put the parts or brass in a ziplock with the cleaning solution. Been working well and you can use fun solvents like wd40👍
And gasoline. Using a secondary container is the best way to utilize an ultrasound. Especially with a large volume unit.
I’ve used the RCBS solution and it worked well. Paid too much for the RCBS branded cleaner and the heating element quit just after they warranty expired.
If you put some window screen in the basket the cases won't fall out
What type pf screen are you using? Metal, plastic, fiberglass?
@@ahuggy911 metal
СКС! Поздравляю с покупкой!
That is the same one I used, and, I used it for the same thing. Hot as I could get and a little simple green/dawn and they came out like new.
I put screen door screen on the bottom to keep small parts in place
I have a VEVOR 6L and it takes forever to heat the solution without running the ultrasonic. It does heat eventually, but my results are the same as yours. I'm looking for a better heating element.
I made a basket to go in the basket out of 1/8 hardware cloth, works well. I use a metal tea steeper ball thing for tiny parts.. works wonders on carburators!
I wonder if you could stick a Soud Vide wand into the bath to bring up the temp faster. My wife has one of them for cooking meat. I have been thinking of buying this Ultrasonic cleaner but the bad reviews.
@@texpatriot8462 Running the ultrasonic unit and the heater at the same time would warm up the solution faster. It would also help degas the solution before you drop any parts in.
Start with hot water
I use a Lee De-priming die to sort my cases works fine and haven't broken it yet.
Kudos Kutter for the stock
Hey not sure if you mentioned this but using di water helped a lot to really clean some stubborn dirt parts.
Johnny for brass use water lemi shine and Dawn dish soap
Got one use it love it.
For really small parts I take a piece of Stainless steel bug screen into a small basket to sit in your basket. That or a stainless steel tea-ball
Always wanted an SKS
Ultrasonic cleaning of brass: dishwashing liquid and 1 teaspoon of citric acid (lemishine). You can also use dishwasher detergent, but it seems to leach zinc from the brass. I usually go about 45 minutes, but I have a smaller unit. The heater isn’t really necessary, water will heat up due to the action of the transducer.
The change in feeling of the brass is probably the lubricant/coating being stripped or the lack of lubricant from dry tumbling.
I believe there is a bit of acid in the commercially available brass cleaning solutions. He put wayyyyy too much in there so it was probably etching the brass.
@@silentbob267 There is, but it is a low concentration weak acid (usually citric). You would need a highly concentrated solution and far longer soak time (although heating helps accelerate the process) to etch the brass. Also, the acid leaches the zinc from the brass and makes it change color first. More likely it is either removal of a coating or simple mechanical scratching.
@@detritus23 You do realize that Brass Juice he poured in is a concentrated acid solution and the reason it says to mix 1ounce to 60ish ounces of water is to dilute the acid to a level that is relatively safe for the brass right?
@@silentbob267 I do. However, the acids is most brass washes are dilute, weak acids, so unless he soaked them for a long time, I don’t think it would etch the brass noticeably. Also, the brass was not discolored, which would definitely indicate acid etching. Could it be etching the metal? Sure. Under the right conditions, it might even leach and plate the copper onto the ultrasonic cleaners tub. But my experience working with acids, suggests otherwise under the conditions and time used. (Also, he was barehanded and acid strong enough to etch brass in 5 minutes would minimally stained his hands or given mild burns.)
Unfortunately, I cannot find a MSDS for the cleaner to comment further. If I can find the specific acids used and their concentrations, then I may have to revise my opinion.
Im looking up cleaning carbs... id like to see what thisbthing does with ckeaning vinegar as the solution
The ultrasonic action seems to heat up the water additionaly.
Johnny, I get a lot of once fired brass and some times new from Diamond K Brass in Scottsdale Arizona. Check them out and see if Jeremiah has what your looking for. Love your videos and hope to see more soon.
They seem like a good company, gotten a few bags from them and they were in good shape with extras. Including a random 8x22 Nambu in one bag of .32. That was a wierd one, but it added to my case collection, so I was pretty pleased.
@@gresvig2507 I’ve had great luck buying brass from them and like you said I’ve always received more than what I paid for. They are very careful not to short you and I’ve bought a lot of rifle and pistol brass. What’s good for me is I live in Cochise county AZ so my orders get here fast but they do ship orders quickly anyway. Good Shooting
Just so you know the ultrasonic action over extended time will heat the solution all on its own.
Might want to keep an eye what you clean with what solution.
I like the Sonic Cleaner a lot, but it will rust the bolt carrier key screws. It also does something to the nitrided bolt carrier finish.
Dunk everything in denatured alcohol, it'll dry BCGs out pretty instantly
I have several ultrasonic cleaners and use them regularly for cleaning brass. They are the quickest and most efficient way to clean brass. I good ultrasonic will clean brass inside and out including the primer pockets in under 10 mins.
My advice when looking to buy an ultrasonic is to look at the power of the transducers (usually either 50W or 60W) and the number of transducers. Then calculate the power and number of transducers per litre of water.
Some sizes will have a better ratio than others. The 3L and 6L models with 60W/1.5L or 60W/2L could work better than the larger 10L models which might only have 60W/2.5L for example.
In my experience dry tumbling is more efficient in terms of time and work necessary to go from dirty range brass to being ready to start reloading.
Thank you for that, I learned alot :)
Is this still running good being one of the cheaper brands wondering how it held up.
Cosmoline melts between 113-125 degrees. When I got my Garands , I took them apart and dumped everything into a big pot of boiling water. Came right off. And Simple Green is fine, but don’t use the standard green stuff. Use either the Purple or even better the Aircraft version of it. They’re safe on all metals. The green attacks aluminum
It looks like the tank is close in size to a 1/4 size steam table pan (like they use in restaurants). I wonder if that is replaceable
Man do I see some sks 7.62x39 in our future
I mean it’s used brass sooo
I was skeptical but it looks like it works...........Everything including us has limits,
you just need to know them !!.......Thanks.
Small parts can be put in a shotglass or similar to keep from falling through the basket
A tea ball or basket works well also
I line the baskets with window screen
How easy is it to empty the water on that unit?
Hahaha I've had one of those for years works Great!
Would I be right in saying that those components are from an SKS rifle?
PS: I wrote this before seeing the shot of the whole rifle. Seems obvious later in the video.
How are you still liking this JRB?
Good video
Deja Vu! It is a good video the second time too!
mine died after 4 uses and that is because it was leaking water into the electronics. it worked well when it did though. I use the hornady brass cleaner and gun parts cleaner. I will say this though, DONT MIX THE PARTS AND BRASS CLEANER SOLUTIONS! I did try and cut corners by cleaning a few gun parts with my brass and it destroyed the nickel boron finish on them. That said, i really like the hornady brand brass cleaner. Just for giggles, you should try the PINOL mountain scented one on there too. the two smell oddly alike. The one thing i dont like is that primer pockets are always a pain to clean with the ultrasonic cleaners. Hopefully you test a good brand i can have better luck with. Thanks for a good video man! love it! Oh and now i use the lyman one. MUCH MUCH quieter and the performance is about the same as the model you are testing right now. worth the extra 20 dollars if you ask me
If you deprime before you clean brass in an ultrasonic it will help clean the primer pockets.
@@silentbob267 i do. doesnt seem to matter though. still hard to get in there. usually i need to go in with a cotton swab to clean them out but that is annoying when you have already taken the brass for a good 10 minutes in the ultrasonic
@@orozcocris93 Haha I used to keep running mine until it was as clean as I wanted it to be. Sometimes I would have batches of brass running 30-45 minutes total time to reach the desired level of clean. Obviously this varies from one unit to the next and the amount of brass but. Try running yours a few more cycles and see if that doesn't help.
@@silentbob267 ill give it a shot thanks!
How do I know how much heat to use and on what?
80 degrees nice. you could also use it to boil eggs
What happen to the beginners series?
is that one of those chinese sks that are getting imported?
I use Purple Power in mine.
I bought the same with 3 times 60watts for about 130 on ali.
I use the hornady one shot brass cleaner
Best brass solution is 2 teaspoons of dawn dish soap and 2 tablespoons of Lemishine in your water
Let run for 20 minutes and your brass will look like new
I use dawn ultra dish soap and water in my ultrasonic cleaner
Nice goopy SKS
Yhe water heats up faster if thr ultra Sonic is running because yhe vibration helps warm it,
Water dawn dish soap and lemi shine will work best
Does this mean 7.62x39 is in our future? I really want to see a heavy for caliber loading in the 150-160gr range
I hope so. I’m working on some 150 round nose for my CZ 527.
@@mr.weaver2682 I've got a few of those 154gr tula soft points that work extremely well for deer.
@@feetoorourke7152 I know about them but never seen them around my area. This is what I’m trying to duplicate. Deer season is almost here. I’ve loaded some 150 Speer Hot-Cor. (.311) Next I’ll load my round noses. (.308)
Pinch of citric acid, dawn and water. To keep the mess out of the tank and from having to clean it alot I put the brass/cleaning mixture in Mason jars and put water in the tank around em. Gun parts I do in stainless "food" pans with hoppes no9 poured in from a quart bottle. Using a separate container let's me pour back into the bottle. I will look into the simple green though.
there are a couple homemade ultrasonic solutions on youtube that you could try
Have you had the opportunity to shoot a Ballistic Advantage 223 Fluted Barrel? I'm looking at an 18" for an SPR build.
I use White Oak Armament 18" SPR barrels and they are amazing. Check my 223 playlist for specific videos about them and a bunch of examples of insane accuracy.
Very hot shower while the wife is away will get rid of 95% of the Cosmoline , did this to most of my SKS , the stock need to baked at the sun for few days after .
I never used one Johnny, but if I had the machine, I would used baking soda, vinegar, some distilled water (mix the baking soda in first with a cup or cup and 1/2) dawn dish soap to soak the brass for 20 mins. then I would give them a good ultra sonic boiling? Just my opinion ?????? Hey water is the main ingredient to fill the machine
Using baking soda and vinegar at the same time would be ineffective as the baking soda would neutralize the acidity of the vinegar. I have heard of using a baking soda wash afterwards to ensure the vinegar is neutralized and doesn't continue eating on the brass after it is removed from solution though.
@@silentbob267 true it would neutralize the acidity of the acid. But, a little baking soda goes a long way to reduce the acidity to make it mild to your brass. I didnt say go wild with baking soda. In making the suggestion I had confidence that we all understood that.
@@jerrymont2595 You weren't very clear on your mix ratios but if your only reason for adding the baking soda is to weaken the acid of the vinegar would it not make more practical sense to skip the baking soda and just use less vinegar and allow the water you are mixing it to to dilute the acid?
I've been using the Hornady brass solution. It's expensive :(
You can reuse the solution quite a few times. I used to drain mine into an old juice container when I was done cleaning and let the heavier particles settle out. When I needed to clean again I would decant into an old cook pot and heat it up on the stove. If I started running low on fluid I would top it up with a little distilled water and a few drops of cleaning solution. It lasts a long time like that, eventually it will reach the point where it stops cleaning as quickly. Then I would dispose of the old stuff and start with a fresh batch.
I have the Hornady unit and love it. Try the Hornady solution for brass.
Nice video and very informative, makes me want to replace my smaller Hornsby brand ultrasonic… One note, I found using the Simple Green HD Pro to be better and more compatible with various metals.