won't sand make a better tumbling media compared to corn or walnut cause it's harder therefor a better scrubbing action?
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won't sand make a better tumbling media compared to corn or walnut cause it's harder therefor a better scrubbing action?
You would ruin your dies and guns in no time flat were you to use sand. Silica will imbed in your brass, every case would act as a piece of sand paper. You would be scratching your dies and chamber every time you ran a case in and out.
The goal of tumbling brass is to clean it. What part of adding sand to the tumbler is cleaning?
I'll give it a try once i get a hold of some sand.
didn't see richbug's post. i guess i won't be giving it a try.
I am sure that the folks who have been reloading forever have tried every product out there. Why re-invent the wheel? Corn cob and walnut work very well and are "just abrasive enough". Your goal is to gently clean them, not sand blast them.
It is a bit funny that you asked for advice; two folks give advice against trying it and then you say "I'll give it a try". Not trying to be overly critical but why bother asking in the first place?
If you want something more aggressive use white ceramic media. You run it wet in a rotary tumbler like an RCBS sidewinder. It will make even the ugliest brass clean.
What you are supposed to be doing is "POLISHING" the brass, not "ABRADING" it. Smoothing it, taking off the dirt and coating, not removing brass itself.
The rouge in the corncob or on the walnut is what does the polishing, not the walnut itself.
If serious changing color or removing a coating is what you are after, there are chemical washes and dips and stuff that will do that for you, but they do alter the chemistry of the case-metal somewhat, removing copper and weakening the case in the process. It is all a trade-off of sorts.
Letting the cases in the tumbler somewhat longer with a little more polish added is a surer way of not violating the cases' integrity.
Flash
Sand for many reasons is a bad idea, How ever a couple years back I had a case of Mil, surplus 3006 that would not clean, I Tumbled it in Black Diamond blasting media for an hour, and then threw it in walnut shells with Flitz, it came out looking like new Brass, but this is only something I would do with a real problem brass, Some of the older Mil, stuff has a coating that can be tuff to get clean.
I have been using "Rice" for over 30 years. Buy a bag of Hard Grain, 5lb
bag. Try it and you will use nothing else. Just be sure to tumble your brass
before depriming the shell cases. A grain of rice can become lodged in the
flash hole. The hard grain rice I have been using has gone from white in
color to gray in color in the past year, no big deal, still cleans the brass to
where it still looks like new. Try it, you will like it.