45collector
NES Member
Yep. If you're lazy like me and don't mind spending the money for convenience, consider shipping out your brass to be processed. I did this with my 223/556 brass and the time savings was worth it to me. Now I wouldn't do this every time I shoot/reload the brass. But it was helpful the first time to remove the primer pocket crimp, trim/chamfer etc. Next time I reload the brass hopefully I just need to resize only - some might need trimming but not sure as I haven't got that far yet...
Brass Processing Service - M&S Processed Brass
We offer a full line of brass processing service from rifle to pistol. Our current offering of processing includes the following: Pistol: 9mm, .40 S&W, & .45 ACP Rifle: .223/5.56 NATO & .308/7.62 NATO Our facility is capable of running 100,000 plus pieces per week. We welcome customers of all...msprocessedbrass.com
No shit! That's cool, I never knew there was a business that did that.
All I did with my .308 brass was tumble it in dry media for ~6 hours (spent primers still in place), then blow each piece out with compressed air. During resizing I would clean out the primer pocket, seat a new primer, trim, chamfer, charge, seat, and crimp. You're saying this company will get the brass back to you fully cleaned/ no primer/ trimmed/ chamfered?