
Thanks
Griffy
I use a Thumler Model B and SS media. The stuff comes out spectacularly clean and bright, inside and out. There might be a faint ring of carbon left in the corner of the primer pocket but it's otherwise as clean and shiny as the day it was born. I even reused the same liquid once just as an experiment and cleaned two large batches of deliberately abused brass. Here's the "water" after the first batch:Jim White wrote:From the pictures I've seen on the web, it appears the rotary tumbler with stainless steel media and lemshine really does the trick, including the primer pockets. The downside, it has to be rinsed throughly and dried prior to use....
I make my living cutting metal using CNC and manual machines, and then finishing it all the way to packaged product, I have been in the manufacturing business (sporting goods products) for 20 years. Here is my opinion, the brass could be damaged by some type of tumbling operations, but if done properly there is little risk. In fact, I would dare say that I can prep the neck opening with tumbling methods and get significantly superior results than anyone can by using cutting tools.Valar wrote:I do not tumble clean my brass. Personaly, I beleive it damages the brass more than anyting. I brush kneck mouth with case braush and wipe as much as possible with a rag and brake clean, Varmit al sys tumbling damages and distorts brass. Makes sense to me. I care not for pretty and shiney, just accurate!
This is just my thought? Feedback?
Sorry to have overlooked your question so long, M_D.M_D wrote:Fred, How long do you run the cases when you use the steel media, and are you using any additive or detergent? Have you tried it in a vibratory tumbler? I would expect the standard light duty vibratory tumblers sold for polishing cases might not vibrate well enough with the extra weight of the water and steel.
To reclaim old tarnished brass and to perfectly smooth (deburr) the case necks without much labor I do occasionally use industrial vibratory tumblers with either light plastic media or small ceramic balls in a wet process and detergent. Using enough water dampens the action, along with using the correct vibrator amplitude and the right tumbler(s). Having said that, all tumblers, media, and processes aren't the same and brass could be damaged in the process. Metal parts that are far more critical and delicate than brass cases are often processed in larger machines. But, I doubt many people happen to have industrial sized tumblers, so it's probably not something worth discussing further.Critter wrote:Industrial Vibratory finishing processes using metal or ceramic media with soap or similar compound is far too agressive for brass and is intended for deburring or precoat surface prep of steel, zinc, and non-ferrous metal parts.
For cleaning and polishing of brass, all you need is a minature purpose built vibratory tub. Media is corn cob and Dillon or other compound for bright finish in several hours. Basically you beat the corn cob media into dust. Process does little or no work on the cases except to remove powder contamination from the firing process and oxidation, and leave a bright finish.