Until recently, I cleaned all of my cases using an ultrasound bath filled with 70℃ water, a squirt of Sunlight and teaspoon of citric monohydrate.
. I was always pretty happy with the cases which took perhaps 15 minutes to get 40 cases [cartridge size dependent] to reasonable cleanliness. Some primer pockets remained gummy and required additional mechanical abrading with a brush. Recently I bought a rotary tumbler with steel pin media
. There are a number differences. First up, there can be no doubt that the steel media process yields a better overall finish [ultrasound cleaned shown on left in next image, steel pin tumbled cases on right]
. The steel pin media cleans the primer pockets too. Also, the rotary tumbler can process more cases in one go [up to 1000 x .223 cases] but takes 4 to 8 times as long to finish compared to the ultrasound bath. That is fine. You canjust go away and do something else. But the real issue is extracting all the steel pin media from the cases at the end
. It is a bit of a faff. The pins "stick" inside the wet cases
. I imagine that pins will fall out of a dried case in almost 100% of cleaning runs.
BUT...the pins are approx 6.5mm long...and in 4 cases of 6.5x55mm brass,pins were jammed horizontally in the neck of the case and had to be pinged out with a screwdriver. I cannot imagine not spotting that before reloading, but if you failed to remove...
. I was always pretty happy with the cases which took perhaps 15 minutes to get 40 cases [cartridge size dependent] to reasonable cleanliness. Some primer pockets remained gummy and required additional mechanical abrading with a brush. Recently I bought a rotary tumbler with steel pin media
. There are a number differences. First up, there can be no doubt that the steel media process yields a better overall finish [ultrasound cleaned shown on left in next image, steel pin tumbled cases on right]
. The steel pin media cleans the primer pockets too. Also, the rotary tumbler can process more cases in one go [up to 1000 x .223 cases] but takes 4 to 8 times as long to finish compared to the ultrasound bath. That is fine. You canjust go away and do something else. But the real issue is extracting all the steel pin media from the cases at the end
. It is a bit of a faff. The pins "stick" inside the wet cases
. I imagine that pins will fall out of a dried case in almost 100% of cleaning runs.BUT...the pins are approx 6.5mm long...and in 4 cases of 6.5x55mm brass,pins were jammed horizontally in the neck of the case and had to be pinged out with a screwdriver. I cannot imagine not spotting that before reloading, but if you failed to remove...











