Ultrasonic, Vibratory or Steel?

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  • čas přidán 29. 08. 2024
  • Quick one hour test on cleaning brass with 3 different style brass cleaners.

Komentáře • 335

  • @dem1157
    @dem1157 Před 3 lety +22

    Here is a trick for you. When your done rinsing and getting all pins out, stuff the tumbler with the brass you just cleaned and a couple 12" x 12" or so micro towels and let it run for 15 minutes. Brass dry and shiny. No more ovens, dehydrators or waiting for it to dry in open air!!!!! Try it, you'll like it😀

    • @the45er
      @the45er Před 2 lety

      Just tried a borrowed wet tumbler. Jeez it was a PITA separating those bloody pins from the wet brass!

    • @6milhunter
      @6milhunter Před 2 lety +2

      @@the45er Use a magnet. The stainless pins I have can be picked up with a magnet. In fact Franford arsenal makes a tumbler pin magnet for just that.

  • @DaveWilburn-USAF
    @DaveWilburn-USAF Před 4 lety +17

    Wet tumble. Love it. I live in Texas so drying goes quick for most of the year. Just a bit of time in the sun.

  • @orionfixr7713
    @orionfixr7713 Před 4 lety +27

    I still run a vibratory cleaner . It's what I started with at a time when that was state of the art . (Been a minute ! ) I still load on a single stage press too . As you can tell I'm not in much of a hurry !! LOL!!

    • @timhofstetter5654
      @timhofstetter5654 Před 4 lety +3

      Single stage press gives you far better precision than any progressive does. I load on TWO single stage presses (tempted to add a third) so I don't have to keep swapping out dies. 8)

    • @timhofstetter5654
      @timhofstetter5654 Před 4 lety

      @Wayne Smith I use a RockChucker for my primary press... but I don't subject my secondary press to any large stress so I just use a cheap little Lee for that.

    • @scottcrawford3745
      @scottcrawford3745 Před 3 lety

      @@timhofstetter5654 Buy the cheap Lee "O" press and get the " Ram Prime II" kit , and use it as a dedicated priming platform... precise, great feel for seating, super easy to feel when the primer is properly bottomed-out without crushing or leaving one " high".

    • @timhofstetter5654
      @timhofstetter5654 Před 3 lety +1

      @@scottcrawford3745 I refuse to install a prime arm on my press (which was equipped with a prime arm but I removed it); a prime arm is an excellent way to have a small explosion right on the press. Instead, I just grab up a few flats of primers and my Lee Auto Prime (round tray) and take them to the living room where I can hand-prime all evening. No press can give me THAT level of sensitivity.
      I did buy the cheapo G-shaped Lee press; I have my powder measure set up on that right now. Saves me a breakdown / setup, and I can seat bullets immediately after charging the cases.
      BTW... Lee has discontinued the press-mounted feeder...

  • @mr.chisels729
    @mr.chisels729 Před 4 lety +6

    That was exactly the progression I went through to end up with the FA and steel media. Never had cleaner brass! Great video!!

  • @robcooper1330
    @robcooper1330 Před 4 lety +39

    I accidentally forgot about my brass in a corn cob media in my thumblers tumbler for 2 days. It came out pretty dang shiny.

    • @XRING
      @XRING  Před 4 lety +9

      No Doubt!! Two days will do it.

    • @timhofstetter5654
      @timhofstetter5654 Před 4 lety +1

      8) 8) 8) 8) 8)

    • @GaryBlankenship96b40
      @GaryBlankenship96b40 Před 4 lety +3

      I routinely let my dillion run 24 hours but at max capacity of cases does great

    • @zhukie
      @zhukie Před 3 lety +9

      I usually use a lyman corn cob tumbler for 12 hrs - the media comes out fairly black!
      Protip: You do not have to buy new media; put the dirty corn cob in an old cut off stocking tie the end off and wash it well in a laundry tub with detergent. spread on trays in a very low oven to dry and its like new. I have not bought any new media for 12 years this way lol

    • @kipjones2815
      @kipjones2815 Před 3 lety

      Same…

  • @Brentor14
    @Brentor14 Před 5 měsíci

    Yup I’m sold I’m getting a wet tumbler I have 500 really dirty old tarnished even a tiny bit of rusty gold medal match casings and my media tumblers not doing the job at all
    Thank you for this awesome comparison I’ve been watching so many videos and no one’s done a straight forward test like this thank you very much it’s made my choice between ultrasonic and wet tumbling so much easier

  • @haroldg48
    @haroldg48 Před 3 lety +3

    Thanks much. I'm just starting reloading and this video was a big help!

  • @glefos3917
    @glefos3917 Před 4 lety +5

    Been using splash of simple green in water with stainless pins in rotary tumbler for a long time. I separate pins, do a quick fresh water rinse and then air dry. Works very well. I’ve heard food dehydrators do very well speeding up the dry time.

  • @johnblood3731
    @johnblood3731 Před rokem +1

    best video on case cleaning i have ever seen. great comparison.

  • @garyt3358
    @garyt3358 Před 4 lety +3

    I started with a vibratory cleaner which does make a lot of dust and my cases didn’t get very clean. The media was everywhere and more than often clogged the primer pockets. When I purchased a Frankford Arsenal wet tumbler and the difference was like day and night. I also incorporated a case drier into my cleaning procedure, now my cases are clean and dry. Another thing to take into consideration is your lead level. My level was at twelve using a vibratory cleaner and went to five after making the change. The following year I started to use D-Lead soap every time I handled ammo components and my lead level is now at three. I also use the cleaner additive that came from Frankford Arsenal and it does better than all the other formulas off the internet.

  • @hoobeydoobey1267
    @hoobeydoobey1267 Před 4 lety +5

    By your testing, wet tumbling was the clear winner for one hour. Dry tumbling goes longer. A better test would involve cost, time, value, etc... I dry tumble and not seen the need for wet. Brass comes out great. I go from 1-4 hours depending if I remember its running in the shed. :-) Soon as it's cleaned, it's reloaded and soon after, unloaded. Just cannot fathom the effort for wet cleaning unless you're making a presentation bullet.

    • @TheSuburban15
      @TheSuburban15 Před 4 lety

      Wet tumbling is supposed to remove almost all of the lead from the priming compound. Wet tumbling, media separation and drying takes about an hour longer per gallon of brass though. Honestly, it's a tedious pain.
      Unless maybe I was running 1ce fired brass that was already pretty clean, I still had brass come out dirty after 3 hours in the vibratory tumbler, where the wet tumbled brass is shiny and looks almost new. I never tried corncob, I always used walnut, which I heard was better.

    • @Sartek
      @Sartek Před 4 lety +1

      @@TheSuburban15 corncob does break down. i prefer a Walnut as well. i usually load up the vibratory Tumblr and let it run overnight with about a tablespoon of brass polish in it.
      the biggest issue with ultrasonic cleaners is the duty cycle. most will only run at about 10 minutes per cycle, and you're not supposed to run more than about 45 minutes continuous or the transducers can burn out.

    • @TheSuburban15
      @TheSuburban15 Před 4 lety

      @@Sartek If I tried to run a tumbler overnight, I'm pretty sure one of the neighbors would destroy it.

    • @52oggie
      @52oggie Před 4 lety

      wet tumbling gets inside the neck & CASE better than dry tumbling

  • @lonz73
    @lonz73 Před 4 lety +5

    I use a FA wet tumbler, works amazing! Your ammo/component stash is unreal!!

  • @TTiger86268
    @TTiger86268 Před 4 lety +11

    have a frankford arsenal platinum that I wet tumble with steel media... Does a great job.

    • @XRING
      @XRING  Před 4 lety +2

      Nice! I think the Frankfords are hard to beat for the money.

    • @MrSpook1968
      @MrSpook1968 Před 4 lety

      I used mine for the first time today and it took a bit for it to start tumbling but once it was it did a great job

    • @mikep1176
      @mikep1176 Před 4 lety

      Have the same Tumblr and then I use a food dehydrator to dry the breast

  • @hobbeeswe7472
    @hobbeeswe7472 Před 3 lety +2

    Feed this mixture into your ultrasonic cleaner and let it run it for just 15-20 minutes at 150-160 F (65-70 C), it will be cleaner than anything you see here on the inside (outside similar to the rotary trumbler).
    1 quart of tap water (approx. 1 liter)
    1 cup of vinegar (approx. 2,5 deciliter)
    1 tablespoon of salt (normal salt used for cooking)
    1 tablespoon of dishwashing liquid (I suggest using a good one)
    You can use the mixture several times but I suggest leaving it at the local recycling plant when it is no longer effective, it contains a lot of lead etc (DONT pour into the drain).
    Greetings from Sweden.

  • @ThecrazyScotsman
    @ThecrazyScotsman Před 4 lety +6

    I have the Hornady never had any issues with it I use cap full of the Hornady cleaner and a dash of dawn dish soap works wonders, as far as the heat goes on there it can get super hot if it is super dirty brass I will usually run it for 30 mins no heat then change out water and add fresh cleaner and run for 30 mins with heat. We all have our little tricks we have learned over the course of our adventures

    • @XRING
      @XRING  Před 4 lety +1

      Thanks for sharing CrazyScotsman! I still haven’t found anything that works as well as the steel pins though. It is interesting to hear all the different methods. Thanks for sharing .

    • @silentbob267
      @silentbob267 Před 4 lety +1

      Ultrasonic cleaners actually heat the water while they are running even without an external heat source. If I remember correctly it is due to all of the friction caused by the ultrasonic waves. It takes a fair amount of time for this action to heat up a solution so they put heaters in some ultrasonic units or recommend starting with warm water to ensure that you are cleaning more efficiently at the start.

  • @TheChampionp
    @TheChampionp Před 4 lety +2

    I run an ultrasonic cleaner with dish soap and Lemi shine instead of the Lyman brass cleaner I was using first. I get brand new looking brass after two 25 minute cycles at 104deg. This includes spotless primer pockets as well as the entire interior of the case. I then rinse them with warm water in a colander in the sink and dry them in walnut media(from the pet store reptile section). Without the walnut tumble they are clean but slightly less glossy and you can see the scratches that they've picked up from resizing and/or cycling in semi-auto. BTW I deprime as first step. If the cases are covered in mud or carbon then I tumble them in walnut for 30 minutes before deprime. This works great for me for about 3 years and has kept me from considering a wet tumbler. I couldn't get them any cleaner, and I'd still be doing a wash-->rinse-->dry. Which is still 3 steps.

  • @rohawaha
    @rohawaha Před 4 lety

    I have been reloading 40 years , media tumbled , ultra sonick and now I " wet tumble " with the stainless pins . I have some media tumblers and two ultra sonic's for sale ! You really need the whole " wet tumble " package to make it fast . I have the tumbler of course , but I also purchased the " rotary basket separator " and " the heat dryer " . The basket separator removes all the pins from my cases quickly and makes it simple to place them back into the tumbler , my dryer has 6 trays and a fan with heat and drys cases in less than an hour. The beauty of wet tumbling is the cases look brand new , the inside of the case is just as clean as the outside and the primer pockets are clean . I love it , on a day off I have wet tumbled 3,000 5.56 cases in a day in between loading. The only down side of the wet tumbler is that you really need an outside sink with water if you like being married " which I do " Both , have an outside sink and like being married .

  • @oriewall
    @oriewall Před 4 lety +1

    Couple of observations, I use a Franklin tumbler with dawn and lime shine no SS pins. Repurposed an old food dehydratator to dry. Makes the process pretty simple 3 hour turn around. I do this for rifle and pistol. Thanks for all the videos.

    • @silentbob267
      @silentbob267 Před 4 lety

      I have heard of some good results wet tumbling with no pins. Although I can typically get my brass clean enough in my dry tumbler in an hour to an hour and a half and I don't have to worry about drying time. I am running pure walnut media with about a cap full of 3M polish at the start of each run.

  • @WhiskyTangoFoxtrot33
    @WhiskyTangoFoxtrot33 Před 4 lety +3

    Love my Thumblers Tumbler. Had it for years and it works great. I use it for brass of course, but also suppressor pistons and SS baffles.

    • @XRING
      @XRING  Před 4 lety +1

      Nice! I use mine for that as well. I did get a LOT of pins stuck in some precarious places in some of them.

    • @WhiskyTangoFoxtrot33
      @WhiskyTangoFoxtrot33 Před 4 lety

      @@XRING I get the occasional pins stuck in the flash hole of brass now and then but I sort by headstamp so its easy to spot. I've never had any issues with pins getting stuck in suppressor pistons or baffles though. One gallon of water, two tablespoons of Dawn, and one teaspoon of Lemi Shine does the trick for me on a full load.

  • @ronwilliams329
    @ronwilliams329 Před 4 lety +7

    @X-Ring We definitely like the rotary tumblers. Have the FA rotary tumbler, affectionately known as the FART. Good end result especially when hot water is used. We reload our training brass for various classes. Since the number of cases for a single class can easily exceed 3500, we got one of those small cheap concrete mixers from Home Depot (about $199 on sale), a bunch of SS media and use the same method as for the smaller FA rotary. Works great and you can do a bunch at one time.

    • @XRING
      @XRING  Před 4 lety

      Nice Ron! I have heard of quite a few people doing it that way.

  • @tysoncurrie7745
    @tysoncurrie7745 Před 4 lety +7

    I use a sonic cleaner on heat with distilled water and Simple Clean to get the grime off of it, rinse them then dry and run through the dry tumbler with corn cob media with Dillons polish to polish the brass up and they come out looking brand new with a high polish. I would compare it to a new Hornady case and they look pretty similar.

    • @mattp9029
      @mattp9029 Před 3 lety +2

      That's what I do as well only I've used Frankfurt's polish. They look like factory new cases.

  • @davidunderwood3605
    @davidunderwood3605 Před 4 lety +5

    I use a lyman vibritory and it has a vented lid. I placed a heavy terry cloth towel and then carbon filter between lid and bowl. It collects all dust. Can be washed or replaced inexpensively. Towels .50$ at wally world and filter under 10$ that can be cut into many. I also add fitz pollish to media (walnut untreated) and pollish's nice and keeps finver prints from setting in brass. But do have to run fo about 2 to 3 hours on really dirty stuff.

  • @dalefine3329
    @dalefine3329 Před 4 lety +1

    I normally run about 1 and a half hours on Frankford Arsenal Platinum with Dawn dish soap and Lemon Shine dishwasher additive. Shine brass makes you happy!

  • @paunchouspilot6757
    @paunchouspilot6757 Před 4 lety +2

    I was on a budget and bought a rock tumbler and stainless pins. I run 50 for about 1.5 hours.Works real well. Just time consuming rinsing and drying as you described.
    Thanks again

    • @XRING
      @XRING  Před 4 lety

      Thanks for sharing the feedback and thank you for watching the video!

  • @qedsteve
    @qedsteve Před 3 lety +3

    I wet tumble. Used to use pins but switched to stainless granules. Small enough to easily empty out of the 223 but large enough to not plug the flash hole. Larger granules can sometimes stay behind in the brass after tumbling. After rinsing, I use the media separator to get most of the water out, dump them in an old towel and shake them up, dump them in another towel, shake them up again and then lay them out on a dry towel to finish drying. Brass looks like jewelry.

  • @bustabass9025
    @bustabass9025 Před 4 lety +1

    Been using a Midway corn-cob- media-fed tumbler since day one, circa 1990. Couple tablespoons of Midway Citrus Scented brass polish, and an hour or so later the results on range worn cases, are worthy of display in a Tiffany's showcase! Transfer time from tumbler to loading-bench-ready, is usually less than ten minutes for a full run of like-new-clean, and dry brass.
    There's always something new or evolving under the sun, with any hobby or pastime. I've got scores of golf clubs to bear witness to that assertion. For me the results, convenience, and cost (think I paid $69 for the tumbler, $10 for the media, and $3 for the brass polish; still using the same ingredients today) generally dictate whether to stay with what works for me, or go with what's new, popular, or works better for everyone else.
    Unlike some handloaders, I don't shoot thousands of rounds a year; more like a few hundred, through about thirty different calibers.
    So...I'm good.
    Guns N Basses Forever! 🔫🎸

  • @carlschnackel3051
    @carlschnackel3051 Před 4 lety +1

    Add some white vinegar to the ultrasonic cleaner. That mild acid helps clean the primer pockets much better. I use a bit of Dawn, Lemi Shine and about a half cup of vinegar. Works great. To dry, I place them on a cookie sheet, with a towel between the brass and the cookie sheet, and place them in a 200 degree oven for about a half hour. In the summer, it's much easier since I can just place the cookie sheet out in the hot sun (in Texas) for about an hour. There's no need to buy an expensive brass dryer. Just get an inexpensive food dehydrator and use that to dry your brass. I'll be buying one soon.

  • @gunfisher4661
    @gunfisher4661 Před 4 lety +2

    Change the subject a little , I learned something yesterday. That a few of the new pistol finishes on the market can not be cleaned in a ultra sonic cleaner nor can quite a few nite sights without damage. And that is from the manufacturers.

    • @XRING
      @XRING  Před 4 lety +1

      Great to know Gun Fischer. Thanks for the comment.

  • @markhowe4419
    @markhowe4419 Před 3 lety +1

    I found that wet tumbling vs dry tumbling is all about patience.
    You have to dry tumble 12 to 48 hours, or longer, but you get simular results to wet tumbling, even clean primer pockets.

  • @danieljones3683
    @danieljones3683 Před 4 lety +2

    I have all 3 types of cleaners. The stainless pins with Dawn and Lemishine works the best in the shortest time but you have to take into account the drying time. I use a food dehydrator to dry mine. I only use the ultrasonic cleaner to clean gun parts now. It never worked that well for me. I do still use the vibratory cleaner some with brass polish added. It is noisy but I set it up to run and leave it for a couple of hours. I don't like the dust but it works pretty well and I can leave the brass in it if I am in a hurry. Good video by the way.

    • @XRING
      @XRING  Před 4 lety

      Thanks Daniel. I agree with you 100% I use all 3 the same way.

  • @terryrickel6550
    @terryrickel6550 Před 4 lety +5

    Just a suggestion for the dry media vibratory tumbler, try using 1 o 2 sheets of USED dryer softener sheets (each cut in half to help with wrapping around you center post) This helps with the dust problem. Just a thought.

    • @IHFarmer2007
      @IHFarmer2007 Před 4 lety

      6.5 Guys did this on their videos as well

  • @thetexasr.a.t.2059
    @thetexasr.a.t.2059 Před 3 měsíci

    I now own all three myself. I plan on using the sonic cleaner for 5 minutes with Iosso Brass Cleaner to pre-soften the carbon and then the wet tumbler with dish soap and steel pins to finish up. The vibratory tumbler will be used with crushed walnut hulls with jeweler's rouge for getting the lube off of the cases once sized and put a high shine at the same time. Then I will wipe them down with a clean rag to be sure and remove any film on the out side of the case.

  • @halfdollar86
    @halfdollar86 Před 4 lety +1

    I use all 3. This video just reminded me In need to get up out of bed and go turn my tumbler off. I actually prefer dry tumbling on rifle brass that’s not horrible dirty because I think it’s quicker. Toss it in, go about your day, come back later and pull it out. Wet tumbling is great and I do use wet tumbling. No doubt it does the best job the fastest run time. But you have to sort those dang pins and dry your brass. I like using no pins anymore. It’s doing as good a job and no pins to separate. Speeds it up a lot. I do that on large lots of pistol brass a lot. I never use my ultrasonic for brass anymore. Just gun parts now.

    • @silentbob267
      @silentbob267 Před 4 lety

      I think a lot of people would choose dry tumbling over wet if they could only pick one if they knew ahead of time how much extra work and time goes into the rinsing and drying and pin removal afterward.

  • @Magisktification
    @Magisktification Před 4 lety +1

    Wow thanks for making this comparison. Ive seen countless people on the tube and web saying that vibratory is quicker than the others without counting in the drying ofc. Seems thats not the case!

  • @papasplace2
    @papasplace2 Před 4 lety +1

    Over the years I have tried all 3...and hands down the wet tumbling with stainless pins is by far the best for clean brass.
    The Lemi-shine is used to "soften" the water so the detergent cleans better. If you have really hard water you will need to use a tad more then someone who has very soft water. And NEVER leave brass in the tumbler overnight! LOL
    I won a Lyman wet tumbler and media separator and they have both given me great service!

    • @XRING
      @XRING  Před 4 lety

      Awesome comment Papas Place. It seems that the wet steel pins wins it. Thanks for the tips .

    • @hub_s550
      @hub_s550 Před 4 lety

      What if you have a water softener? Would you need the lemi-shine?

    • @silentbob267
      @silentbob267 Před 4 lety

      @@hub_s550 I believe the Lemi-shine aids in cleaning as well. If you are worried about it try it without on a batch of brass and with on another and see which turns out better. Just go easy on the lemi-shine a little goes a very long way. More than a teaspoon is typically a waste and too much can turn the brass funny colors.

  • @Doc.Holiday
    @Doc.Holiday Před 4 lety +1

    After the ultrasonic, I rinse, tumble in a towel, then anneal. The annealing brings up the temperature enough to thoroughly dry the case. It also tumbles it so the water does not stand and dry with calcium deposits.

  • @wnctarheel9626
    @wnctarheel9626 Před 4 lety +2

    After watching several videos on CZcams I built my own wet tumbler out of a clothes dryer motor and some spindles and belt off of a treadmill I picked up at the local salvage yard for free. I use lemishine, dawn, hot water and stainless media and it works great.

    • @XRING
      @XRING  Před 4 lety

      That’s awesome! I was in Sportmans Warehouse today and they had packs of stainless media on the shelves.

  • @georgecolbert3247
    @georgecolbert3247 Před 4 lety

    I agree. I use the SS pins. You use a plastic media separator to separate the pins from the brass. I use a sneaker rack lined with dog screen to dry the brass in the clothes dryer. The cases get clean and shiny inside and out.

  • @VernonDozier1508
    @VernonDozier1508 Před rokem

    I've tried all 3 but since I've switched to the wet tumbler that is all I use. I tried the pins but they are a giant pain to separate. Now I just hot water and Frankford Arsenal cleaner. Does a great job.

  • @lutherprice2062
    @lutherprice2062 Před měsícem

    Great video Ray, I’ve been trying a similar way, the wet tumbler without steel pins. You don’t get that factory new shine but you don’t have to deal with the pins. I’m also concerned with getting the brass too clean, causing galling when seating bullets. I just tried rice in a dry tumbler and it does pretty well and leaves the black graphite/ burnt powder on the inside, which is not a bad thing. Enjoy tour videos, Thanks.

  • @firearmfuntimes1246
    @firearmfuntimes1246 Před 4 lety

    I use the old way (regular tumbler) then resize. This way the media dust kinda lubes the case. Also, I drop in a few hundred bullets without thinking and leave it tumbling until I am ready to resize. Then I use the wet tumble, that makes the brass shine and cleans the primer pocket really good. Thanks for the video.

  • @TheSuburban15
    @TheSuburban15 Před rokem

    I can't argue that wet tumbling with steel pins doesn't do a fantastic job of cleaning the cases. It's when the timer goes off and I have to separate the pins and rinse and dry the brass that I start to hate wet tumbling i didn't get great results from the vibratory tumbler, but it only took a few minutes to separate the walnut shell from the cases and I was done.

  • @RimfireAddicted70
    @RimfireAddicted70 Před 4 lety

    Once you wet tumble you'll never go back. The brass is a clean as new inside and out. My Dillon tumbler is now used only for removing lube on cases after prepping, it's pretty fast for that at and can handle large volumes. I bought the Extreme Rebel 17 Rotary Tumbler, it's pricey but quality built and quiet, plus wearable parts are replaceable to it'll last forever, nothing made of plastic to break.

  • @steelpunisher6944
    @steelpunisher6944 Před 4 lety +2

    Cool video! I only use my Lyman dry tumbler for powder coating now. The Frankford with pins works so much faster. I did ruin some 45acp with way too much lemishine when I first got it. Great video X-RING

  • @paulharveu526
    @paulharveu526 Před 4 lety

    Very helpful. I've been reloading almost 2 years now, but dont have a tumbler. I've always at most, rinsed them off with soap and water. Was looking at Sonic and Vibratory last night.

  • @DeltaMikeNoshoot
    @DeltaMikeNoshoot Před 4 lety +1

    Ive had my thumblers tumbler for about 10 years. Finally wore out the lid rubber gasket a month ago. Fitted a new one and its back up and running.

  • @Greenjeans2020
    @Greenjeans2020 Před 4 lety +1

    I was dry tumbling with the large Dillon for years. About 2 years ago I started wet tumbling with the Frankford Arsenal unit. Night and day difference. I was given some really dirty and corroded range brass and just for fun I wet tumbled it to see how it would turn out. It darn near looked like new! I use a dehydrator to dry the brass. A bit more of a process but well worth it! Now I only use the dry tumbler for removing case lube after being reloaded.

  • @bltefft
    @bltefft Před 6 měsíci

    Very telling video. I've always dry tumbled w/ corn cob media - 50+ plus years. Got to take another look at the stainless steel wet tumbling setup. Just don't like the wet clean-up and drying of the brass after. I like to be able to tumble, reload, shoot. I made a DIY timer that turns the tumbler off after about 3 hours. While I'm in dialysis for 3 1/2 hours, I tumble brass.

  • @oddursigurdsson3046
    @oddursigurdsson3046 Před 4 lety +1

    Nice, glad I picked the steel media type :) Thx for sharing :)

    • @XRING
      @XRING  Před 4 lety

      Thank you Oddur and thanks for watching.

  • @oneshoeless
    @oneshoeless Před 4 lety +2

    You would have gotten the same result running the Thumbers Tumbler for 20-30 minutes. An hour is way more than I have to put brass in there. Like you said though, if you are in a hurry the dry media works well as you don't have to dry it.

    • @XRING
      @XRING  Před 4 lety +1

      Thanks Joe, never tried it for that short amount of time. Good to know.

  • @josedodgedon1347
    @josedodgedon1347 Před 3 lety +1

    Good video comparison. Very informative.

  • @danielbyrnes2470
    @danielbyrnes2470 Před 4 lety

    Walnut media with some brass polish is best for the initial cleaning. Corn cob with brass polish is best used to get your sizing lube off of your cases and give them a final polish. About an hour to an hour and a half in the walnut and about two hours in the corn cob.

  • @steveh1759
    @steveh1759 Před 4 lety +2

    I'm wet tumbling and dry tumbling and have similar results to you. One perk to dry tumbling is you can dry brass after wet tumbling. Enjoyed the vid.

    • @XRING
      @XRING  Před 4 lety

      Thanks Steve H and thanks for watching. I thought it was a good topic to put to a video.

  • @mikebigelow9057
    @mikebigelow9057 Před 4 lety +1

    I picked up two rock tumblers at harbor freight add stainless pins, dawn, and one cap
    of turtle wax and brass is clean and shiny. Can get 60 to 70 pcs of brass per tumbler.

  • @Rustebadge
    @Rustebadge Před rokem

    Nicky neat but I've been loading since 1986 and have always used the large Dillon vibratory tumbler. It is enclosed and does not create dust. My cases are clean, safe for reloading, and since I'm not interesting in impressing myself with how shiny I can get brass since I will soon dirty it again, my results are excellent. I load for 17 different calibers and for Class 3 firearms that cost as much as some cars. The result is I keep shooting and do not waste time staring at my cases.

  • @Scablands_Scavenger
    @Scablands_Scavenger Před 2 lety +1

    Excellent! thank you for the video. I have used a dry tumbler for 20 years or so, switched to a FA wet tumbler a few years back. I really like the results of the wet tumbler with a dash of dawn and a little lemmi shine. The problem for me is I don't reload large lots of ammo so the FA is total overkill. I was considering an ultrasonic but after watching this I think I will just buy one of the small rock tumblers and use it with the stainless pins.

  • @guardianminifarm8005
    @guardianminifarm8005 Před rokem

    Very interesting. Appreciate the data & demonstration.

    • @XRING
      @XRING  Před rokem

      Glad you enjoyed it and thanks for watching the channel.

  • @jemsietrotter
    @jemsietrotter Před 4 lety +2

    I used walnut media in a vibratory tumbler for years then my son got a nat geo rock tumbler for xmas, I bought some s/s pins, some citric acid and some washing up liquid and gave it a go. Now I dont use the the vibratory tumbler and my son doesn't have a rock tumbler and my brass is very shiny haha. Seriously I would never go back to walnut/corn media now, the s/s pins does a great job in a fraction of the time.

  • @JerrBearTactical
    @JerrBearTactical Před 4 lety +3

    So I always deprime all my cases 1st then use my commercial grade Ultrasonic Cleaner set at 200 degrees temp. For 30 minutes with just dawn dish soap and half a teaspoon of lemi shine. Prime pockets and inside case come out spotless. Then I Rinse ,dry then resize then I wet tumble without stainless steel media. Just super hot water, Dawn dish soap and Lemi shine to remove cast lube and my brass comes out better than new 😁👊👍

    • @XRING
      @XRING  Před 4 lety

      Thanks JerrBear. These were de primed as well. I usually just use the sonic cleaner for parts now days. I rarely ever do cases with them any longer.

    • @Tallhorse89
      @Tallhorse89 Před 4 lety

      What are you guys using to deprime first.

    • @CtrlAltRetreat
      @CtrlAltRetreat Před 4 lety

      @@Tallhorse89
      There's a lot of options, i use a Frankfort arsenal universal deprimer if I'm just in front of the tv and not paying much attention but I actually found it faster and get better results with a lee classic and a small mallet if I took the time to make an alignment disk for it.

  • @rondavis191
    @rondavis191 Před 2 lety

    wet stainless pin tumbling cleaner is hands down the best cleaner polisher, like new results. but most importantly, the inside of the cases are as clean as the outside. a no brainer for me. tanx. Ron

  • @garyowens8201
    @garyowens8201 Před 4 lety +1

    Wet tumbler, only way to go!!! Mix your favorite cleaner concoction, put the pins and cleaner in and go

    • @XRING
      @XRING  Před 4 lety

      That’s right! Best way to go.

  • @jeremyritsema2532
    @jeremyritsema2532 Před 4 lety

    I use a combo of both stainless pins and corn cob. Rinse the brass and shake dry after the pins. Then corn cob takes the moisture away in 15 minutes. No oven required.

  • @keithburns5707
    @keithburns5707 Před 4 lety +2

    My process is pretty involved I start by cleaning the brass with acetone and then I size in D prime and then I put the brass in the steel pin Tumblr and then I’ll take it out of there and put it in my dryer rack and then I go to the corn cob with the Dillon polish by time I get done it is so clean and bright and makes everybody else is ammo look like crap but it is absolutely clean there is a speck of carbon anywhere. I found out with the steel pens if you don’t polish it’ll dial in a short period of time especially if you start handling the brass the same with the ultrasonic it’ll do the same thing that’s why I go to the corn cob in the polish make sure that stays nice and bright. I know some people don’t care what it looks like but it’s embarrassing to go to the gun range and you got crappy looking ammo.

    • @B4maslowski
      @B4maslowski Před 4 lety +2

      So it shoots better when it looks nice?

    • @silentbob267
      @silentbob267 Před 4 lety +1

      I have heard some guys are substituting automotive car wash'n wax soap into their wet tumblers in place of the Dawn dish soap and it supposedly keeps the brass shiny for a long time similar to dry tumbling with a polish.

    • @briannemec9214
      @briannemec9214 Před 3 lety

      @@B4maslowski Depends on how much you shoot and where you get your brass.. Your dies will last longer.

  • @kipwright148
    @kipwright148 Před 4 lety +3

    Day in day out I like the “old school” tumbler. Simple and effective. One hour is not enough time in a tumbler. I have a Hornady sonic cleaner. It doesn’t process enough at one time for me but it is great for cleaning AR parts.
    Wet tumbling gets brass the “shiniest “ but way too much work separating pins and drying etc...
    Soooooo I prefer to tumble for what it’s worth.

    • @timhofstetter5654
      @timhofstetter5654 Před 4 lety +2

      There's a trick to using a magnet inside an inside-out ziplock bag... and finding the right sieve that's got BARELY small enough holes to catch all your brass.

  • @riverbard8287
    @riverbard8287 Před 4 lety +1

    Very interesting. Some precision load work ups would be cool too. Different powders, bullet weights and shapes, seating depths and barrel twist would be very informative. I'm particularly interested in 6.5 Grendel right now.

    • @MrWhitebp1
      @MrWhitebp1 Před 4 lety +1

      Go look up "Johnny's reloading bench" here on CZcams. He has a whole series on the Grendel doing just that, it's very detailed.

  • @ryan06ization
    @ryan06ization Před 4 lety +2

    That lemishine stuff works great to get carbon off your muzzle brakes also. Just mix a little in a cup with water, toss your brake in for 15-30 mins, then pull it out and brush of the carbon.

    • @XRING
      @XRING  Před 4 lety

      Nice! Awesome tip! I will have to try that.

    • @ryan06ization
      @ryan06ization Před 4 lety +1

      @@XRING for carbines that are pinned, just get the water level right in the cup, and set the rifle in it muzzle down in a corner.

  • @wilk128
    @wilk128 Před 4 lety

    Stainless steel pins, hot water, dawn dish soap and lemmi-shine for brass. Always deprime first! Cheap food dehydrator from Amazon for drying.
    Ultrasonic cleaner with hot water and Simple Green HD (safe for all metals) for cleaning handguns, reloading dies and AR Bolt Carriers. Rinse with hot water, then air compressor to dry.

  • @Jerry-Parker
    @Jerry-Parker Před 4 lety +1

    Excellent testing !👍
    Great footage !📹

    • @XRING
      @XRING  Před 4 lety

      Thanks Jerry. I appreciate it.

  • @bchboy1206
    @bchboy1206 Před 3 lety

    Awesome video, I was going to get an ultrasonic cleaner but seems like steel does the best so I will stick with what I have! Thanks for that!

  • @terrycole7753
    @terrycole7753 Před 4 lety

    SS Pin tumbler, soft water, a few drops of dawn (varies with how dirty the brass is), and about .5-.75 oz RCBS Ultrasonic cleaner solution. 1 hour for lightly dirty brass - 11/2-2hrs for really dirty brass. Comes out looking like new.

  • @Majeskty
    @Majeskty Před 10 měsíci

    Nice video for comparsion of the different options for cleaning our once fired brass!
    I have a Lyman 1200 Vibratory tumbler which I have had many 40+ years and still going strong. I then decided to try the RCBS Ultrasonic (original), latest and greatest at the time. Then I have the Frankford Arsenal Stainless Steel Pins. All these will work to a certain degree for cleaning and to shine them. The longest being the Vibratory to get that almost like new shiny look. The stainless steel pins work extremely well for even the primer pocket to get clean, however you will need a dryer unit and I have a food dehydrator, since the company's at the time didn't have such.
    Stainless pins work well for most of my pistols and rifle, however recently I purchased some 'Southern Shine Media' from TB Bullets for concern of bottleneck rifle brass. This media is Stainless Steel Chips, you thought pins are small, these are much smaller to get into those recess's like primmer flash hole and not get stuck in bottleneck rifle brass. Purchase a magnet like Frankfort Aresenal sells, works for those pins and the chips which just hard to pick up with a finger.
    I used the chips on some 223/556 brass and it cleaned them well. Get the screening basket from Lyman (2 parts to setup), or the Frankford Arsenal screens that go into the lid of that system. Be careful opening, the pins and chips stick everywhere that has water, however I did find the chips didn't stick to the lid as much as the pins (observation).
    Dump the dirty water, then rinse, I then put them in my brass separator, with water in the bottom high enough to reach the lower part of the separator basket. The water will break the surface tension of the pins or chips and will fall to the bottom after several rotation of the separator. Chips all fell into the bottom and very few dropped into the bottom of my dehydrator when brass/pins/chips was dry. Maybe a few more rotations and all the chips whould have been separated.
    Well this is how I am cleaning my brass for pistol and rifle. Don't forget the Limmey Shine or a Rinse Agent to avoid spots when drying. Stainless takes more steps but they sure look nice at the end.
    Best to all, sorry so long.

  • @wilfdarr
    @wilfdarr Před 4 lety +1

    This was awesome. Thank you.

  • @ElfstersRiflesandReloading

    Awesome! Nice work bud!

  • @LeewardStudios
    @LeewardStudios Před 4 lety

    I prefer sonic for 20 min with dawn and lemishine. Rinse then wet tumble with dawn again. Rinse, dry (old food dehydrator cheap and quick) then I like to tumble with nu-finish and walnut media for a polish. Yes takes time but the results are great and the polish really helps keep the tarnish down in long term storage. Good point on the lemishine it pulls the zinc out of the brass, not just bring it to the surface. Prolonged exposure will weaken the brass and shorten the life significantly. I will not let it sit in brass for long. Remember it is an acid, acids love to dissolve metals!

  • @bob14219
    @bob14219 Před 4 lety +1

    the thumblers tumbler works great with ONLY dish soap and lemishine with HOT water from the tap......you dont need the stainless pins as long as you tumble about a hundred or more (enough to bang off each other) added bonus of not having to deal with pins makes this my preferred method...usually an hour or two makes them like jewelry

    • @scottcrawford3745
      @scottcrawford3745 Před 3 lety

      If you tumble with ONLY cases, you will never get the insides of the cases/ necks or the primer-pockets clean like you can with the pins going both outside and inside.

    • @bob14219
      @bob14219 Před 3 lety +1

      @@scottcrawford3745 I use very hot water and Dawn dishwashing detergent with some Lemishine and tumble just the brass - Im talking primarily pistol brass - and Im satisfied with primer pockets and insides.....I concur that the pins are going to be marginally better but sometimes good enough IS good enough and Ive found that to be the case here.

    • @scottcrawford3745
      @scottcrawford3745 Před 3 lety

      @@bob14219 Ok.. Sorry. Pistol brass, I'm fine with that too.. I shoot F-class Precision Rifle, and I'm a bit ADD about my brass being squeaky clean and precise. When I shot IPSC, I'd be totally fine with Visually clean.

  • @wingding028
    @wingding028 Před 4 lety +1

    i use lyman turbo cleaner with a tea spoon of citric acid cleans them very well when i want a really nice shine i put them in the corn cob media after for a hour

  • @lawrencelewis1036
    @lawrencelewis1036 Před 2 lety

    Iv been using the Thumblers Tumbler for decades, lemi shine and dawn with ceramic media.I replaced those wing nuts on the lid, ordered some knurled knobs from Enco.

  • @briannemec9214
    @briannemec9214 Před 3 lety

    Go down to the laundry room and get a fabric softener and cut into 4 pieces or smaller. Put in vibratory cleaner and there will be no walnut dust problem. Add a little polish and the brass will look like new. Just cleaned 1000 45acp brass. The hard part now is casting and lubing a 1000 185 gr H&G bullets..

  • @johnnysaechao6218
    @johnnysaechao6218 Před 3 lety

    I use purple cleaner to clean the stainless pins every 3 to 5 use and keeps the pins clean and cleans the brass better and won’t leave that dingy color afterwards..

  • @fumasterchu12
    @fumasterchu12 Před 4 lety +1

    I did research on these years back but I just stuck with the dry media tumbler. I turn it on out in the garage to keep away from the dust. I also just dump it in and leave it for a few hours. I was thinking about upgrading to the wet tumbler and watched a lot of videos on that too. Sure looks like it does a great job, especially in the primer pockets. Have a nice weekend brother~Cheers~

    • @TheSuburban15
      @TheSuburban15 Před 4 lety

      Wet tumbling works amazingly well, but will add about an hour of labor to separate media and dry per gallon of brass.

  • @johnsimonelli9988
    @johnsimonelli9988 Před 4 lety +1

    Two things, 1: I run a tumbler for three hours and the brass is spotless when done NO CHEMICALS to worry about. 2: I run a Omega 300 suppressor with an anchor brake on the end of it and my brass on a variety of calibers NEVER looks that dirty or even close to it.

  • @sanmiguel2197
    @sanmiguel2197 Před 4 lety

    That was awesome comparison! I am getting the H.tumbler! Thank you sir! Me Love You Long Time🥰😘

  • @scottf.3808
    @scottf.3808 Před 4 lety +1

    Good testing as nice share....Good stuff.....

  • @gaylecoombs5510
    @gaylecoombs5510 Před 4 lety +1

    Great video thank you sir very informative I was thinking about getting a dry media tumbler but now that I seen your video might try to see about the SS tumbler

    • @XRING
      @XRING  Před 4 lety

      Thanks Gayle. I am glad I did this video, it seems many people liked the comparison.

    • @silentbob267
      @silentbob267 Před 4 lety

      Nothing wrong with dry tumbling. This comparison isn't exactly fair to the dry tumbler either because it doesn't include the time it takes to rinse and dry the cases from the wet tumbler or ultrasonic cleaner. Wet and dry tumbling both work great but are different in a few key areas. Just make sure you do plenty of research on both processes before you buy to make sure you end up with the one that works best for you.

    • @gscotty311
      @gscotty311 Před 4 lety

      @@silentbob267 Rinsing/drying a 1 hour wet tumbling job > Scrubbing leftover carbon and dusting off a 3 hour + dry tumbling job!

  • @d2x3po
    @d2x3po Před 6 měsíci

    I have a three step process. 1. Put all range brass in a bucket with dawn soap and stair with a stick and rinse. Then the brass go into the ultra sonic cleaner with dawn and lemishine. This removes all the dirt so not to scratch my dies. Then I de-prime and resize the brass. Normally I can stop here if reloading pistol but if I'm reloading rifle I put them in to the tumbler with walnut/blast media to remove the resizing lube. Tried the pins and found they were too much of a hassle and the Frankford Rotary Tumbler leaked.

  • @MPGunther1
    @MPGunther1 Před 4 lety +1

    Very good comparison video! Thanks for the demo

    • @XRING
      @XRING  Před 4 lety

      Thanks MP and thanks for watching.

  • @spankyttt
    @spankyttt Před 4 lety

    I have used a media (walnut) tumbler for years but have been interested in wet tumbling for awhile. This is a good video but clearly the preferred tumbler was obvious before the test began. I would like to see a cost comparison between the tumblers and cost for each of the cleaners as well as maybe completing the test on each of the cleaners using NO ADDITIVES and another test using the recommend or preferred additives/cleaners to make a good comparison. Besides that, thanks for the video. My search for an apples to apples comparison continues.

  • @Cerus98
    @Cerus98 Před 3 lety

    Love my FA Platinum tumbler and steel pins. About 30 mins with hot water and they’re sparkling clean. Really no need to go longer than that.
    The sonic cleaner looked like it didn’t do squat.

  • @JV-qb6ib
    @JV-qb6ib Před 5 měsíci +1

    Great video!

    • @XRING
      @XRING  Před 5 měsíci

      Thanks JV. 👍🏼

  • @MrBirdman123
    @MrBirdman123 Před 4 lety +2

    Use the sonic cleaner, dry it on a fan then use the tumbler with walnut and it looks like new

  • @nickfugleberg7731
    @nickfugleberg7731 Před 4 lety +1

    Should use lemi shine and dawn in ultrasonic also, it's much better comparison.

  • @kubotamaniac
    @kubotamaniac Před 4 lety

    Excellent video! Thanks!

  • @adamwilson1362
    @adamwilson1362 Před 4 lety +3

    I use the Frankford Arsenal corn Cobb with a brass polish additive it works good but man is it loud I always take it to the other end of the house

  • @Nope145
    @Nope145 Před 4 lety

    Very good video. I bought a Hornady sonic cleaner several years ago when Ammo was scarce for reloading pistol ammo. For the most part the Hornady worked pretty good. I think I got better results on my pistol brass and you got on the Grendel brass, Possibly due to the fact that you used a suppressor. One thing I never liked about the Hornady cleaner is the heat mode. It seemed to leave the brass tarnished.

  • @joed3264
    @joed3264 Před 4 lety

    I have been reloading for over 40 years. Started out with a Rock Chucker, then went to a Dillon 550 20 years ago. Have been using a Hornady M-2 for 30 years. Too bad they no longer offer that model. I buy 50lb bags of walnut media from McMaster Carr. I don't need highly polished brass like you get with corn cob. BTW I dump a little Nu Finish car wax in the tumbler to ease in sizing. It is not worth cleaning 5.56 IMO. You can buy them already cleaned and primed. All I load now is 9mm, .40 S&W and .45ACP. I have the M-2 on a timer. I just set it for 4 hours and let it run overnight.

  • @lukeflaugher5334
    @lukeflaugher5334 Před 4 lety +1

    Very cool video! Perfect timing as I’m getting ready to start in reloading

    • @XRING
      @XRING  Před 4 lety

      Thanks Luke! Glad I could get this video done.

  • @Bogie3855
    @Bogie3855 Před 4 lety

    I have had all 3 systems over the years and my wet tumbler is FAR more effective, quieter, cleaner than everything. I do the recycling for a large shooting club and some of the brass gets overwintered and come out with rust stains, salt bloom and black oxidizing. 2 hours is all it takes and the wet tumbler cleans the inside to factory clean. I hunt so I have a dehydrator so that dries it perfectly. No going back for me. What I would normally have had to scrap I can clean to factory clean. No brainer.

  • @greggboone3158
    @greggboone3158 Před 4 lety +1

    I use both the stainless steel pins and the corn cob media. I use the stainless steel pins to clean my brass. Then once it's dry, I use the corn cob media to polish. My brass comes out looking like new. A little bit more work, but I think it's worth it.

    • @XRING
      @XRING  Před 4 lety

      Thanks Gregg and thanks for watching.

    • @nicholaswirth1011
      @nicholaswirth1011 Před rokem

      Does that make any difference to projectile and cartridge performance though?

  • @Corney279
    @Corney279 Před rokem

    Great video, much appreciated!

  • @45auto
    @45auto Před 4 lety +1

    I have a different model of Thummler and use ceramic media and some cleaner I don't remember but a little goes a long way. Your brass looks like my black powder brass. The lead in the dry media dust is the main reason I went with a wet tumbler. Plus, the media will literally last longer than you will.

    • @XRING
      @XRING  Před 4 lety

      Absolutely! I have been using the same steel pins for like 5 years now.

    • @victormiller7440
      @victormiller7440 Před 4 lety

      @45 Auto Where do you source the ceramic media?