Skip to main content
Thank you for your patience as we work through our high volume of requests. If you need assistance with 2FA, please provide the correct phone number in your ticket request so we can assist quicker.
Help Center Community Shop

Reloading sequence

Comments

7 comments

  • Odawgp
    I tumble the case when I return from the range first.
    then inspect, resize, trim, prime, load

    the chemicals used in the tumble media could (not likely but possible) render the new primer inert or a piece of media may get stuck in the flash hole and block it.
    0
  • codenamepaul
    Cases are tumbled in corn cob after the range. Then they sit......

    Until I deprime/size. Then they go into the walnut overnight. After that they get primed. Then they sit......

    Until I get enough power and bullets to load them all.
    0
  • peppersac
    How long should you leave them in the walnut media? The walnut just polishes the brass right.
    0
  • sandwarrior
    sirgknight,

    Why reprime if in case you have to throw away brass? If you tumble them do it before you resize them. The point is to resize a CLEAN case. Then you can clean the primer pocket and bevel the lip of the neck. I just blow out the case body after resizing. You can also inspect the cases that are cleaned, each one, as you are resizing them. You can't see a case that needs to be thrown away that is dirty.

    So, clean. Inspect and size. Trim(if necessary, I call it part of the sizing process) Finish cleaning(primer pocket) THEN reprime. Then figure out a load. Then put the right amount of powder in your case. Then stuff the bullets You can figure out your seating depth while the cases are tumbling.
    0
  • dcs shooters
    Always clean the cases first. A dirty case will wear out your sizer die even if it is carbide. Then when you resize if there is a piece on media in the primer hole it gets pushed out with the old primer.
    0
  • sirgknight
    clean first. makes perfectly good sense to me. i knew there had to be something odd about my logic. i'm having a wonderful time with this new hobby/interest. probably not saving a great deal of money but there's no charge for the therapy it provides. not to mention the camaraderie on a forum. thanks.
    0
  • joe4570
    It kind of works well to decap fired cases with a universal decapping tool and spare your dies the contamination. Then either liquid clean or tumble and clean the primer pockets before sizing and seating new primers.
    0

Please sign in to leave a comment.

Recent Activity

Didn’t find what you’re looking for?