Georgezilla wrote:Thanks for writing that up, Toy.
So am I understanding this right: A tumbler is something that
uses some sort of abrasive polishing material to polish used brass
and the media separator is what you use to clean said polishing
compound out of the cartridges?
If so, is all that really needed for just reloading .45 acp?
you're welcome... it wasn't much, but I started for a different motive.
Tumbler: as mentioned, I don't have/use one, so I probably should
not respond
I believe the "media" is Crushed-Walnut-Shells, down to little nuggets
about 1-2-3mm and you tumble for 2-3-4 hours... not unlike the process
for a RockPolisher... and the seperator is basically a strainer.
When all is said and done... it makes the brass nice and shiney for
you to mess 'em up. If you've ever examined/bought any bulk
ReLoaded ammo at a GunShow... that brass has likely been tumbled.
for me... a Qtip with some powder-solvent will clean-out most any
crud in a casing... just sit it aside for a few days to evaporate!
if the brass is so bad... just toss it in the scrap-bucket.
I don't perceive any "need" for tumbling rifle brass more than pistol.
just ease-into the 'hobby'... and postpone the tumbler for a while...
you'll decide if you want to mess with one or not... my 'vote' is "no".
I had original intentions of tweaking some loads for 200yd .308 Benchrest,
but find that I spend more time with 9mm and .223 because it's an interesting
and enjoyable passtime...
I've loaded my .30-30 to have some range-loads that aren't trying to
kill a deer at 150yds... and my .30-06 just to be able to shoot it
more than four-times in an afternoon!!

and still lift-a-cool-one later.
keep us posted. --toy