I miss my buddy Cmax. We got to share a lot of time at Pop's Quest farm. He was a really good man. Thanks for sharing brother. I still just use the lemi shine and Dawn dish soap. But now I know if I can't find the lemi shine I can just buy cheap lemon juice. God Bless brother.
GOOD video! Thank you 've been playing this game for many years, ( lemon juice & vinegar ) which worked ok, but your new idea looks better. Again, thank you. I am now a follower,
I tried this method about three months after buying a brand new dry vibrating Tumblr. I was so mad at myself for not trying this first before spending $200.😳🤬
Brass looks great! Literally heading to do what you've shown in this video right now, thanks for the share and helping a new loader learn some good tricks!
Any idea why you can leave brass in the lemon juice formula for weeks without the zinc issues but not with vinegar or lemi shine? Some other formulas also use salt. I wonder if that has something to do with it. Anyway, thanks for the video. Sorry you have to answer to the tumbler people over and over. For the small amount of brass I reload, I don't feel like buying a tumbler.
The vinegar formulas add a shit ton of vinegar and it's more acidic than lemon juice. The salt may play a part too "sea salt" carries many different ions, chlorine among them... it will make the already acidic solution more aggressive (it's like using hydrochloric acid).
So please explain to me how this is better or easier than tumbling? I tumble all my brass with stainless pins and only takes 2 to 3 hours a quick rinse and 15 mins in the air fryer to dry and i am done. My brass looks 99% to 100% of new with inside and outside polished up real nice with clean primer pockets. So once again how is this quicker or better then tumbling?
I created a couple of very similar formulas (both with lemon juice and vinegar) and worked perfect for me for years. I also use a compressed air puff to clean the primer pocket, it will be absolute cleaned in one second. Then, I dry and prime them. Good to know other people use similar process, which is easier and shorter than putting in tumblers. One more thing: I use distillated water for a final rinse, this avoid water spots/stains on the brass, product of the different minerals the tap water contains.
Why? It's not like tumbling brass is hard or expensive. This method is, in comparison, complicated, time consuming and messy. Solution in search of a problem.
Not everyone has the money to buy all of the components that you need as soon as they start reloading. As I stated in this video in the previous video, this is for help for people who are just getting started.
I appreciate the video and the knowledge. I’m on a strict budget and an empty Folgers coffee can is a lot cheaper than a store bought system. Thank you sir and God bless you and your family
I live in South Africa and the normal way we do it here is to submerge the brass in tomato sauce. You can leave it for 12 hours or as long you like. Then we rinse it and put it in the sun to dry out. Try it it works fine. Discard the sauce after use. For our tumblers we use rice as cleaning agent.
Instead of sink dish soap, opt for dish washer detergent. it's the same product, just doesn't suds up. It's also more concentrated so you don't need to use it as much. It's engineered to be run in cycles. And overall a better product for this application.
so would you leave this in for atleast 24 hours for cleaning or can it range from a few hours to however long youd like to leave it? great video by the way. just getting into reloads and cant bring myself to spend money on a tumbler yet
Wow thank you so much for this I’ve been cleaning with the old method for like a year and was so frustrated with the spotting and discoloration and I just tried this and my brass looks so much better You earned a subscriber from this one
Any cheap Sonic cleaner with work !! I use a cheap 35 $ one I bought from Amazon a couple years back ... Use citric acid and Dawn dish soap ... you'll never LOOK BACK ..
Seems a lot of work to me. I deprime my brass , rifle and revolver, divide into two rock tumblers with dawn and pins tumble for a hour , when done dump the water and the brass and pins into a separater with some rinse aid in and turn the handle a few times, put the brass on a perforated tray , drain the separator ( built in strainer ) leaving the pins in , put all equipment and brass into the airing cupboard ( warm boiler room ) to dry ( brass appropriate a hour )and job done ! whole process takes a 3/4 hour or less of actual work. I inspect the brass as I lube when sizing. Don’t like my brass too shiny just clean , I also remove the lube after reloading by wiping the whole cartridge down with clean cloths! Sorted! 🇮🇱🇮🇱🇮🇱🇮🇱🇬🇧🏴🌺💪. 🤜💩🥷🏽💩🤛
Good stuff! I’ve missed your videos. Since I last spoke with you, what I have been doing is taking a cleaned out cottage cheese container and I’ve been using the same recipe that you are currently. The only exception is I’m using a 10mm casing size of lemi-shine with the Dawn dish soap. It works off the same principle which is citric acid. After the hot water gets poured over the mixture, I stick a lid on it and agitate it the bucket every 5 minutes. I let it sit in this bath probably 15-20 minutes. Then I pull everything out and rinse. The problem with lemi-shine is the same problem with the vinegar. It will start eating the zinc. So it can’t be left in there for a long time. If the lemon juice works better, I’ll give that a shot. I’m always trying to learn new things. Thanks for a great video!
Any acid will react with zinc very quickly, I suppose the key is to keep the concentration low and get the brass out of there fast. I've seen some of the commercial brass cleaners are actually basic (as opposed to acid), I'm guessing they have ammonia or something. One thing I want to try is ultrasonic cleaning with some liquid.
I have something for you guys out there. Using your formula check this out. You can perform 2 tasks and have fun doing it. I'd put this on RU-vid but never learned how. Ok here it goes. Just like a golf course, go to local hardware store and get a piece of schedule 40 PVC 8" or 4" by what ever length you need, 2 bolts, 4 nuts, 4 rubber washers, 2 quick pins, 2 aluminum angle irons with all the holes. I went with 3'. Drill one end cap in center and bolt and seal the through bolt. The other end threaded, drill center and seal. That way you can remove solution, media, and brass. Basically you just made a stripping kit. Tow behind. Takes me 4 hrs to mow. Lawn looks awesome to You can make a couple of tubes and change out half way with quick pins for large quantities. That's my cheap red neck tumbler
I use the same formula, too. But lately I repeat the process using automotive wash and wax. This seems to put a really nice shine on them. My nice tumbler now sits idle most of the time. Thanks for the vid, you nailed it.
Bravo, what an effective excellent enginutive insightful method of cleaning metallic brass cartridges! During the 1980s, I was taught and used a similar mix like your old formula, and yes, it would scorch the Brass Casings if they were left in the soultion too long. I really like how you specifically clearly came out and said several times a "Warning" for people to not use Container/ Vessels like the Colander -Strainer or Oven for Food preparation every again. I instruct my Kaido Ojamaa-VKV Universal Bullet Fishing Sinker weight Customers similar. As such, it is important to recognize and do such and relegate such vassals for their new cartridges, making purposes. I will even write , engrave on any Pots, Vessel, Container, Collender, etc. The following bellow: "Use For Bullet Cartridges Lead Contaminated, "Not For Food Use". Bravo, again to you for doing so, you won my subscription!
I know I am late to the party, BUT, Thank you for the wonderful information. I did not want to buy a tumbler, its just more equipment. I can not wait to try this. 😁
Thanks for the video. Don't think the brass looked as good as with dry media w/dryer sheets and additive but definitely one way to clean without a lot of equipment.
1 hour in my tumbler with walnut and mine comes out looking like brand new... less than 5 minutes total time it's ready to resize.. been doing it that way over 25 years
@@Boringunguy With a coarse grit its often indistinguishable from most of the wet methods (ultrasonic being the exception) unless you add the buffing step to the wet methods, but if you're doing high volume processing you definitely aren't adding that step.
@@retreadz6971 I’ve dry tumbled for years. Tried different media and different polishing compounds. Nothing beats wet tumbling. I still dry tumble my finished and loaded ammo before storage. But anyone that says dry is just as good as wet tumbling, is ignorant.
@@ModernMountainMan You def. helped me, I don't have money to spend on a tumbler at the moment due to buying everything else I need to load at once first
long time no see man. I use your formula even still, but i do use a bit less vinegar. I also found an ultrasonic jewelery cleaner at goodwill, along with a toaster oven for drying. your earlier video helped me along more than any. hope all is well. 💪🇺🇸
@@ModernMountainMan I'm not sure I used the right proportions of everything cause I remember it being a bit underwhelming, but it was probably just user error.
Sorry but I don't find your brass to be very clean. About 1 hour to 1.5 hours in my tumbler with corn media and it looks like brand new brass. Super clean and super shinny. No need to be messing with water, soap, lemon juice, toaster oven. Simply tumble, shake out the brass from the media and ready to go. All the more power to you if you feel that's good enough but I like my reloads to look even better than store bought stuff.
@@dirtfarmer7472 I use a Lyman 1200 tumbler and it retails for 110$ so it's not that expensive. Simply my opinion, everyone has their preferred methods. Guess I like the shinny trinkets. 😆
This is the first time I ever watched you a video. I would be more interested in the vinegar solution. It sounds like it would work better. I don't polish that much brass. I usually just sit down with piece of steel wool and go over it which is painstaking takes about 10 to 15 minutes for each shell
I like the "like newness" of clean brass. I run a lot of semi autos, so I don't want to give let tarnish build up over time and possibly gum something up.
I find my old Ruger semi auto carbine 44 never missed a beat with clean brass but would sometimes jamb if the brass was dirty or tarnished, so l always made sure the ammo was squeaky clean and purdy 😅😅