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Rifles, Reloading, Optics, Equipment
Reloading
Cleaning loaded cases
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<blockquote data-quote="tinman13kup" data-source="post: 700880" data-attributes="member: 36220"><p>Most case lubes are water based, so I will tumble and size/decap them and then put them in a big container with some dishsoap and hot water. I stir them up and then rinse the crud off. It really is some nasty water that comes out. Then it's off to the oven for a 250* bake for an hr. </p><p> I've had a lot of problems with some reloads I inherited because of case lube. My AR's won't shoot many before the carbonized lube starts rearing it's ugly head, mostly by not allowing the bolt to get to battery before the case gets stuck.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="tinman13kup, post: 700880, member: 36220"] Most case lubes are water based, so I will tumble and size/decap them and then put them in a big container with some dishsoap and hot water. I stir them up and then rinse the crud off. It really is some nasty water that comes out. Then it's off to the oven for a 250* bake for an hr. I've had a lot of problems with some reloads I inherited because of case lube. My AR's won't shoot many before the carbonized lube starts rearing it's ugly head, mostly by not allowing the bolt to get to battery before the case gets stuck. [/QUOTE]
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Rifles, Reloading, Optics, Equipment
Reloading
Cleaning loaded cases
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