First, let me say that I'm new to reloading, and I'm just getting ramped up and ready for production with my Dillon XL650. I'm looking to do primarily 5.56, but I may also jump to doing 9mm and 45 on that machine in the future. I'm in no rush to start hammering out rounds, and I'm taking it slow learning each part of the process thoroughly before moving on to the next step.
Starting with brass prep, I'm using a Dillon CV-500 to clean buckets of dirty old brass. After that, I'm checking the condition of the cases and separating out by certain headstamps. From there, I was going to run it through the 650 to do a full length resize/de-capping, swage the primer pockets, and resize with the Dillon RT1200. Having never done this process yet, I haven't seen how cleanly cut the cases come out from the case trimmer, but I've heard they do an extremely clean-cut negating the need for deburring/chamfering.
From all the reading and Youtube videos that I've digested, it sounds like I should be good to start loading rounds with that brass, but I understand that a lot of people like to drop the brass in a tumbler after de-capping to clean out the primer pockets. I don't know if that's necessary or not, but I'd appreciate recommendations if you have them. Also, for standard range ammo, is it worth it to deburr flash holes, or is that a process reserved for precision loads?
What kind of tumblers do you like or do you like using both kinds? I just have the dry tumbler for now and I've tried walnut shell and corn cob media. It's okay, but I was looking at purchasing or building a wet rotary tumbler. I understand they come out a little prettier from that process, but drying the brass would be an added step.
I know a lot of you guys have been reloading for decades, so I'd appreciate anything at all that I can glean from the community on case prep.
Starting with brass prep, I'm using a Dillon CV-500 to clean buckets of dirty old brass. After that, I'm checking the condition of the cases and separating out by certain headstamps. From there, I was going to run it through the 650 to do a full length resize/de-capping, swage the primer pockets, and resize with the Dillon RT1200. Having never done this process yet, I haven't seen how cleanly cut the cases come out from the case trimmer, but I've heard they do an extremely clean-cut negating the need for deburring/chamfering.
From all the reading and Youtube videos that I've digested, it sounds like I should be good to start loading rounds with that brass, but I understand that a lot of people like to drop the brass in a tumbler after de-capping to clean out the primer pockets. I don't know if that's necessary or not, but I'd appreciate recommendations if you have them. Also, for standard range ammo, is it worth it to deburr flash holes, or is that a process reserved for precision loads?
What kind of tumblers do you like or do you like using both kinds? I just have the dry tumbler for now and I've tried walnut shell and corn cob media. It's okay, but I was looking at purchasing or building a wet rotary tumbler. I understand they come out a little prettier from that process, but drying the brass would be an added step.
I know a lot of you guys have been reloading for decades, so I'd appreciate anything at all that I can glean from the community on case prep.