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How often do you polish pistol brass?

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TooManyToys

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Feb 12, 2011
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Just curious, so I thought I would post the question in poll.
This is just for fun, so please jump in.

How often do you polish (tumble) pistol brass?

A, I'm a neat freak, After every firing!
B, I'm casual, After a few loadings or when I get around to it.
C, Usually just tarnished & found range brass
D, What's a polisher??

ALSO
: Any polishing tips, experiences, or fun stories you wish to share?
 
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Not a freak?!

I polish pistol brass before each load. The way I have always done it. Never really thought of that as too much, just like the ammo to look good when it is done.
 
Im B.5



I always polish everything when I get home from the range. Then polish about half my reloads after loading, depending on what kind of time I have.

When I purchase brass (once-firedbrass.com) I deprime, tumble for a short time to try and get pockets a bit cleaner, then usually polish those again after loading.
 
Perhaps reformat the question as an actual poll.

All fired brass goes in a bucket (by caliber) and is tumbled when I need more. So every time it's shot.
 
If by polishing you mean tumble, every time I load that brass. I even tumble my nickel stuff, just because I like to make sure there isn't anything in the brass that could cause a problem, and to remove any grit that could scratch the brass.

GS
 
A. I figure it mandatory for a proper seal in the chamber.
4 runs in a sonic cleaner and about an hour in the tumbler.
 
You must be talking about bolt action rifles. If I polished all my 9mm and 45's after reloading, my hands would fall off.

I just toss fired cases in the tumbler for a couple hours and call it good.
 
A i clean my brass before i put them in my dies also if i have a crack in
my brass it is easier for me to see it
 
I reload .44 Mag and .45 ACP. I take fired brass: deprime, resize, flare mouth, tumble in polisher, reprime, drop powder, and seat/crimp. Then I shoot it and start the process again.


My process is slow, tedious, methodical, etc. I don't want a mistake.
 
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