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Rifles, Reloading, Optics, Equipment
Reloading
weight sorting brass, Now what?
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<blockquote data-quote="Wado" data-source="post: 1171163" data-attributes="member: 42926"><p>I believe this is my first post on this forum so here goes. After I size, trim, clean the mouths up and flash holes I stick my brass back into the polisher for a final clean up. Put the gloves on and blow every piece of brass out with dry air to make sure there are no pieces of media in them then I weigh sort. I reach in the bucket of brass ( alike head stamps ) and grab a random piece. I set it on my digital scale and write the weight down. I may grab three or so more and record the weights to see if there is a average weight to start with, once I decide which way I want to go high or low I set that piece of brass on the scale then zero it. Then I just weigh one at a time and the overs go into one pile and the under into another. I usually separate them four ways. Does it help, I doubt it but it doesn't take all day to do.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Wado, post: 1171163, member: 42926"] I believe this is my first post on this forum so here goes. After I size, trim, clean the mouths up and flash holes I stick my brass back into the polisher for a final clean up. Put the gloves on and blow every piece of brass out with dry air to make sure there are no pieces of media in them then I weigh sort. I reach in the bucket of brass ( alike head stamps ) and grab a random piece. I set it on my digital scale and write the weight down. I may grab three or so more and record the weights to see if there is a average weight to start with, once I decide which way I want to go high or low I set that piece of brass on the scale then zero it. Then I just weigh one at a time and the overs go into one pile and the under into another. I usually separate them four ways. Does it help, I doubt it but it doesn't take all day to do. [/QUOTE]
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Rifles, Reloading, Optics, Equipment
Reloading
weight sorting brass, Now what?
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