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#1
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I wouldn't. I'd fire all the primers and do it all over again, the right way. The problem, to my thinking, is there is a high likelihood of polishing cob working its way into the flash hole. You won't be able to see it or get all of it out. When you fire your loaded rounds, the grit will interfere with th e primer flash, and give you unpredictable powder burn. Or failure to fire altogether.
Randall |
#2
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__________________
Rich COTEP #762 A gun is a tool, no better or no worse than any other tool: an axe, a shovel or anything. A gun is as good or as bad as the man using it. Remember that. And shepherds we shall be, for Thee, my Lord, for Thee. Power hath descended forth from Thy hand, that our feet may swiftly carry out Thy command. So we shall flow a river forth to Thee, and teeming with souls shall it ever be. In nomine Patris, et Filii, et Spiritus Sancti. |
#3
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Nope. We're talking at least 700 or probably more .45 pieces of large primer brass. I'll resize em tarnished first
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NRA Life Member Wilson Combat CQB Kimber Tactical Pro II S&W J-Frame .38 ect " I don't own the clothes I'm wearin', and the road goes on forever " ![]() There's a gator in the bushes, and it's calling my name... COTEP #523 |
#4
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I have heard of people tumbling loaded rounds, but not unloaded and just primed. I would think you would be ok. I have tumbled live rounds before, not on purpose. I do though put .22 in the tumbler. .22 can be very dirty so if you tumble it for a just a short bit it cleans it and keeps the gun cleaner. Works too.
anyways I would think it would be an issue of getting something in the primer hole...but heck I don't really know. If you have any casing that are shot and still primed you could just tumble them and see if crap gets in the flash hole? A little test.......
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#5
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I would reload tarnished and then polish the finished rounds. I have done this before with no issues. What I didn't do was stuff the tumbler. I also would make sure up I didn't hang around this it was time to turn it off
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#6
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#7
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Anyway, back to the thread...why bother with re-tumbling? Tarnished btass shoots just fine in my guns. Randall |
#8
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Unless the tarnishing is so bad you can feel it and worry about feed and function why bother? Reload em and shoot em. Then start the process over correctly by depriming them before tumbling.
Or is there a mental need to see fresh shiny cases going into the chamber? ![]() I don't reload but the first thought I had was same as others, how do you guarantee no material clogs flash hole inside? |
#9
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I would worry media woud get in the primer. I have tumbled hundreds of rounds of live ammo. The vibratory tumblers won't generate enough punch to dent a primer enough to fire. So I would load then tumble. One othe suggestion would be to decap the primed brass, tumble the un-primed brass, then re-seat the primers. I do it with a decapping die. You just have to move a little slower and press softer than if you are using fired brass.
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CBOB0746 NRA Life Member Florida CWL Since 1992 |
#10
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nah, I'll just resize, expand and load. I ain't decapping 1000 live primers
__________________
NRA Life Member Wilson Combat CQB Kimber Tactical Pro II S&W J-Frame .38 ect " I don't own the clothes I'm wearin', and the road goes on forever " ![]() There's a gator in the bushes, and it's calling my name... COTEP #523 |
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