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Rifles, Reloading, Optics, Equipment
Reloading
Reloading Equipment
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<blockquote data-quote="IHFarmer07" data-source="post: 1535255" data-attributes="member: 75397"><p>From what I read all over and see on youtube, I agree that a tumbler of any sort is not really worth it until you have to have the upmost in accuracy like a bench rest shooter does. You brought a very good point up, really all that a tumbler is needed to do most times is to take off lube and shine the brass up. I watched the 6.5 guys on youtube and one had a wet tumbler and don't use it anymore because it got cases too clean so he went back to dry tumbling, so unless your cases are extremely dirty with mud and muck I don't see a use. All I do is clean the inside neck with a wire brush, clean primer pockets, wipe the brass with a towel, apply resizing wax, resize, wipe brass off, prime, load, seat the bullet and by the time I'm done the loaded bullet looks like new.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="IHFarmer07, post: 1535255, member: 75397"] From what I read all over and see on youtube, I agree that a tumbler of any sort is not really worth it until you have to have the upmost in accuracy like a bench rest shooter does. You brought a very good point up, really all that a tumbler is needed to do most times is to take off lube and shine the brass up. I watched the 6.5 guys on youtube and one had a wet tumbler and don't use it anymore because it got cases too clean so he went back to dry tumbling, so unless your cases are extremely dirty with mud and muck I don't see a use. All I do is clean the inside neck with a wire brush, clean primer pockets, wipe the brass with a towel, apply resizing wax, resize, wipe brass off, prime, load, seat the bullet and by the time I'm done the loaded bullet looks like new. [/QUOTE]
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