Hillhunter
Active Member
What do people use instead of lemishine, I'm going to start wet tumbling and need an alternative
The citric acid/Lemishine isn't used in wet tumbling as a cleaner, you only use 1/4 of a teaspoon to soften the water, this enables the pins and detergent to do a better job .
Putting more of it in actually reduces the effectiveness of the wet tumbling process.
At the strength citric acid (a mild acid to start with) is being used in this application and the time involved, the amount of brass affected is negligible to start with (a molecule or two's thickness). It's enough to remove the surface molecule's tarnish and that's about it in most cases. If you're doing much more than that, you're using too much citric acid, not enough water and keeping the brass in the liquid for too long.
A case of a little is good and more is NOT "better." In any case, not structurally or functionally harmful to the brass.
Too much citric acid will darken the brass, from what I've seen and read. It also leaches out zinc from the brass, Citric acid is used in leaching metals from RCRA classified hazardous waste under the CA STLC process.
Basically a very small amount will remove the surface tarnish, add to that just enough detergent to get some soapy bubbles after tumbling and that should be the perfect ratio. Always change the water during the tumble and thoroughly rinse the cases when finished tumbling.