I looked up Brass Juice and it's $20 plus $10 shipping for 1 liter. Is that what y'all are paying??'try brass juice
I looked up Brass Juice and it's $20 plus $10 shipping for 1 liter. Is that what y'all are paying??'try brass juice
That's why we cut to a uniform depth after the first firing, and use seating tools that are adjustable. Never EVER load a primer proud to the case head.Dirty primer pockets are a MAJOR problem for a revolver. If the primer is not seated deep enough, because of dirt and gunk, the cylinders will not revolve efficiently. Had this problem a lot with both my Super Blackhawk 44 and my Blackhawk 357. Never affected any of my rifles, but the thought is still there that the primers are not seated properly. That alone could cause poor performance in a rifle.
totally agree with the seating statement. NO proud primers.That's why we cut to a uniform depth after the first firing, and use seating tools that are adjustable. Never EVER load a primer proud to the case head.
Even in benchrest, lots of folk don't bother cleaning pockets, once they are cut to a uniform depth. Shoot em the way they come out of the tumbler.
Dave,This is more of an annoyance, but I'm hoping someone here has a trick I can learn.
I have a Hornady sonic cleaner and no matter how I load the cleaner, or how many rounds of cleaning I do, I still end up with several cases that have gunk in the primer pocket. For those that have such case cleaners, how do you prevent this, or deal with it other than wait for it to dry and use a primer pocket tool to clean it up afterwarrd?
I have used 1Shot cleaner and found if you really need them super sparkly clean to use a Q-tip followed by a Redding primer pocket uniform tool.Hornady's OneShot cleaner.