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The Range
Ammo & Reloading
Anyone use old school brass cleaning
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<blockquote data-quote="Dumpstick" data-source="post: 3922239" data-attributes="member: 41653"><p>I reloaded cartridges for years without a tumbler. I washed the brass, mostly just hot water and soap. Even now I rarely clean rifle brass, not washed, not tumbled. I just wipe the neck after shooting and stick it back in the box to reload. Of course, my rifles are bolt guns. The brass rarely touches the ground.</p><p></p><p> I didn't have a tumbler until one came in a lot of stuff I traded for.</p><p></p><p>Decades ago nobody had a tumbler. Reloaders were easy to spot, with the brown cartridges. I don't think tumblers became popular until into the early 1990s.</p><p></p><p>There's an awful lot of time and typing about the part of reloading that makes the least difference.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Dumpstick, post: 3922239, member: 41653"] I reloaded cartridges for years without a tumbler. I washed the brass, mostly just hot water and soap. Even now I rarely clean rifle brass, not washed, not tumbled. I just wipe the neck after shooting and stick it back in the box to reload. Of course, my rifles are bolt guns. The brass rarely touches the ground. I didn't have a tumbler until one came in a lot of stuff I traded for. Decades ago nobody had a tumbler. Reloaders were easy to spot, with the brown cartridges. I don't think tumblers became popular until into the early 1990s. There's an awful lot of time and typing about the part of reloading that makes the least difference. [/QUOTE]
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Anyone use old school brass cleaning
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