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The Range
Ammo & Reloading
Review-ish Storytime: The Frankford Arsenal Tumbler Testing Story
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<blockquote data-quote="Rez Exelon" data-source="post: 3869945" data-attributes="member: 5800"><p>I suppose there's a good chance I overdid my Lemishine. Although ---- there's also a chance that I have the wrong one. I've seen some posts about there being a difference between "Lemishine" and "Lemishine Booster". I may just order some straight citric acid since it's cheap-ish. </p><p></p><p>I agree, I 100% rinsed all cases with the hose after processing. My "post spin" procedure generally was as follows:</p><p></p><p>1. 5 gallon bucket with a pan style media separator on top. Carefully pour out the cases.</p><p>2. If there's a lot of cases, do step 1 in halfsies really</p><p>3. Agitate by hand to get most of the pins to drop. If big batches are present use the magnet. </p><p>4 Transfer the pan over a different bucket. Rinse with garden hose while agitating more. </p><p>5. Pour out onto a piece of thin cardboard in the sun.</p><p>6. When dry, put back in pan and agitate more.</p><p></p><p>Now, I say generally because right now I have one of those ball type spinner do hickies on hand, but it's not mine. Testing with that made the procedure much nicer though so I may break down and get one. Doing it that way:</p><p></p><p>1. Open the ball over the bucket and fill it up.</p><p>2. Spin it a lot each way</p><p>3. Move cases to the pan over bucket B for the rinse and etc.</p><p></p><p>The ball spin did give me much more confidence all the pins were actually out, although concerns on the bottleneck ones still are there. On those I did another spin in the ball after they were fully dry. </p><p></p><p>I suppose I could cut the steps down but that method let me reuse solution, keep my hands pretty clean, and didn't dilute the solution with water when doing the rinse. Clogged up the prettiness of the backyard with buckets and stuff everywhere so I probably couldn't get away with it all the time.</p><p></p><p>I should also note that as part of my "I'm done with this for now" cleanup I also did a very thorough multi stage rinse of the pins and then baked them in the sun for a few hours to full dry too.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Rez Exelon, post: 3869945, member: 5800"] I suppose there's a good chance I overdid my Lemishine. Although ---- there's also a chance that I have the wrong one. I've seen some posts about there being a difference between "Lemishine" and "Lemishine Booster". I may just order some straight citric acid since it's cheap-ish. I agree, I 100% rinsed all cases with the hose after processing. My "post spin" procedure generally was as follows: 1. 5 gallon bucket with a pan style media separator on top. Carefully pour out the cases. 2. If there's a lot of cases, do step 1 in halfsies really 3. Agitate by hand to get most of the pins to drop. If big batches are present use the magnet. 4 Transfer the pan over a different bucket. Rinse with garden hose while agitating more. 5. Pour out onto a piece of thin cardboard in the sun. 6. When dry, put back in pan and agitate more. Now, I say generally because right now I have one of those ball type spinner do hickies on hand, but it's not mine. Testing with that made the procedure much nicer though so I may break down and get one. Doing it that way: 1. Open the ball over the bucket and fill it up. 2. Spin it a lot each way 3. Move cases to the pan over bucket B for the rinse and etc. The ball spin did give me much more confidence all the pins were actually out, although concerns on the bottleneck ones still are there. On those I did another spin in the ball after they were fully dry. I suppose I could cut the steps down but that method let me reuse solution, keep my hands pretty clean, and didn't dilute the solution with water when doing the rinse. Clogged up the prettiness of the backyard with buckets and stuff everywhere so I probably couldn't get away with it all the time. I should also note that as part of my "I'm done with this for now" cleanup I also did a very thorough multi stage rinse of the pins and then baked them in the sun for a few hours to full dry too. [/QUOTE]
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