The motor has seized mid tumble of some .357 magnum. I’ll run it by a shop here in town but the repair might eclipse the replacement cost.
Hey Chris, welcome to OSA. Thanks for the info. I had to do a quick search on the brass juice. I’m looking for something new and it sounds promising. If anyone wants to look at some YouTube vids, there’s some out there too.I've used a Frankford wet tumbler for years. Last year I ditched the steel pins and started using Brass Juice. The brass looks great, very clean and shiny. But no polish or lube on them. So I put a bit of lube on everything including pistol brass. If I don't the brass tends to be a bit sticky in the dies and it slows things down. But otherwise this is the best cleaning solution I've ever used in 30+ years of rerloading.
Dillon replaced mine with the 2000 for free.My Dillon Precision CV-500 tumbler has given up after 25+ years of heavy use. Is anyone using anything they would recommend over a new Dillon?
(I have sent a warranty question but I am guessing I know the answer)
Andrew
A second on the rebel, shinier than new. Makes seating primers soooo much easier.I had my Dillon rebuilt by Dillon when the motor went south. Apparently there was a problem with the original motor, that caused longevity issues. They pretty much promised that the rebuild would out last me. It was somewhat costly to do but that thing has been running extremely well since its trip to the Mother ship. It's only money, and I ain't buying primers so there is that. Good luck. BTW if you want to go wet tumble the Rebel Extreme 17 is a tank of a wet tumbler. A 9mm case of citric acid and a dollop of Armor All car soap or McGuire car soap with four pounds of pins and water and about four hundred cases cleans really well. The soap makes the cases glide through the resizing dies better than Dawn.
For dry tumble used dryer sheets quartered, a capful of Nufinish, maybe a cap full of Mineral spirts, run tumbler with additives for 15 or twenty minutes without brass, then add brass does a fine job. Zilla lizard bedding makes fine tumble media. Little dusty but four or five runs with quartered used dryer sheets will suck it up.
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