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Rifles, Reloading, Optics, Equipment
Reloading
Brass prep
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<blockquote data-quote="mpk1996" data-source="post: 1966674" data-attributes="member: 27656"><p>The things I would add would be to get some flitz media polish (Amazon) and put that in your media for final cleaning after you resize. This helps give the inside of the neck a little "lube". This helps seating depth be more consistent. </p><p></p><p>no need to wipe the brass clean. Just libe, resize, put in media tumbler.</p><p></p><p>now I do prefer to de prime first. Then clean as most of my shots are done in competition and the brass ends up pretty dirty. So I don't like all that going into the die. If you've just been on the bench, won't be an issue.</p><p></p><p>If you do anneal, always do it BEFORE you resize. You run the risk of having everything be off if you do it after. Annealing is the get the neck and shoulder back to orig hardness. It helps with split necks/shoulders in the long run. And consistency in the shorter time by giving a more consistent neck tension.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="mpk1996, post: 1966674, member: 27656"] The things I would add would be to get some flitz media polish (Amazon) and put that in your media for final cleaning after you resize. This helps give the inside of the neck a little “lube”. This helps seating depth be more consistent. no need to wipe the brass clean. Just libe, resize, put in media tumbler. now I do prefer to de prime first. Then clean as most of my shots are done in competition and the brass ends up pretty dirty. So I don’t like all that going into the die. If you’ve just been on the bench, won’t be an issue. If you do anneal, always do it BEFORE you resize. You run the risk of having everything be off if you do it after. Annealing is the get the neck and shoulder back to orig hardness. It helps with split necks/shoulders in the long run. And consistency in the shorter time by giving a more consistent neck tension. [/QUOTE]
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Rifles, Reloading, Optics, Equipment
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