Ovenpaa wrote:I would be very interested to hear how to get the best out of the machine and where you initially went wrong and what it's limitations are
OK, here we go, in no particular order:-
Make sure the machine is level before use. If you don't, the container can slide and create an alignment problem with the magnetic field produced. This slows down the speed of rotation.
Don't overfill it. If you do, the velocity of the cases being cleaned slows too much and the hydraulic effect of the water is compromised. I tried many different trials and settled on a maximum of around 130 .223 cases, or around 100 .308. For me this gave the best blend of cleaning speed and batch size. Pistol cases however, without a bottleneck, are no problem for 200 .45 long Colt.
The water will get dirty very quickly, but I find 30-40 minutes per batch gives excellent results. You can run it less or more depending on how clean you want your brass.
Use a good quality detergent. Fairy liquid works fine, but the lubricant effect of this is as important as it's cleaning properties. The really cheap washing up liquid works, but you do use more and the lubrication effect is not quite as good. Remember, speed of rotation is your friend.
Although it certainly works with cold water, I get best results using hot water.
Rinse the cases well after cleaning and swirl extensively to ensure as many pins as possible are captured by the magnet (keep the magnet in a plastic bag to make removal of any rogue pins)
I tumble the cases in a media separator and then on a large towel to remove any pins trapped inside the cases (you will get some) and dry the cases on a towel. Nothing worse than getting a mirror like finish on your brass ruined by water marks.
Every now and then run the machine with a limescale remover, it builds up on the pins and container and really does slow the velocity of rotation down when it builds up.
Make sure you inspect every, and I mean every, case. You will get occasional pins stuck in the primer pocket or case neck.
I did try heavier gauge pins, but went back to the originals as they produced a higher lustre on the case.
Finally, don't clean any for your mates, cos they keep coming back!
