Drying cases

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I just arrange them in a single layer on a towel on the counter in my garage and turn the ceiling fan on. The next morning they are dry and ready for the next step.
 
For a three day dry, I put them in a towel that is under my overhead heater. One shake up every day and they are completely dry in three days.
For an overnight dry they go into a broken down refrigerator that I remover the shut-off switch for the light and wired in a small personal fan and replaced the bulb with a 25w bulb. I made 7 drying trays to fit the 7 shelve positions.
For a two hour dry, I found a dehydrator sitting on top of a garbage can on trash pick up day. I took it for the trays, but just for ****s and giggles I plugged it in and heard the fan hitting the bottom of the case. 10 minutes later it was working perfectly.
 
I put them in a shallow pan and set them outside on my heavy steel workbench. With the wind and low humidity of this area It doesn't take long even in fairly cool temperatures. I keep enough stock on hand that the rare wet spell isn't a problem.
 
Mine get put on a big towel and shake them then on big cookie pans in the oven for 30 minutes at 200 and all dry
 
In the Summer I put them on a baking tray and set them outside in the sun. In the Winter the same baking tray gets set in the oven at 200º or so for 30-45 minutes. My Wife made me a "pillow case" from an old towel that I use to shake them around in to help remove any water in the cases.
 
After wet tumbling my rifle brass, I remove them from the water, inspect the flash hole to make sure no pins are stuck and place the brass in a $6 hot plate I bought at a thrift store set for 200 degrees. Using a wooden spoon to agitate, they are dry in a matter of minutes.

Remove them and place them in a separate cooking pan that my wife does NOT use to let them cool and place them in a plastic bin to await reloading.
 
It really depends on how annal you are about water spots, I'm in the SoCal desert and have really hard water, so letting it air dry left a lot of spots, ended up getting the Hornady case dryer, dries it out within an hour or so and does a better job at preventing hard water spots.
 
I dump them on a big cotton bath towel, gather up the four corners, and toss them around for a few seconds. That dries the outsides and empties any residual water out of the insides. Then I just spread the towel out on a table in the shop and let the brass sit there overnight. It's dry and spotless the next morning.
 
I put them into a big flannel pillow case and "slosh" them around. Thats dries the surface off and prevents water spotting. Then swinging the pillow case around a few times dislodges most of the internal moisture.
In warm weather I then place the sac of cases on the car dash in the sun and the cases likely will be too hot to touch in a couple of hours.

In cold weather they go on top of the floor central heating duct and dry off overnight.

The climate around here is just right for those options.

I do have several food dehydrators but have never needed to try those.
 
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