Brass Sorting, Cleaning, Culling
Posted: Tue Feb 10, 2026 1:35 am
Well, it’s Friday night and time for the weekly article. We had several discussions about various aspects of brass prep recently. So that’s the topic. For you experienced folks, add anything I’m missing here. I will post to the site later tonight.
FRIDAY NIGHT RELOADING
Brass Sorting, Cleaning, Culling — How Far to Take It (Without Wasting Time)
Brass prep is where good ammo starts. You can have premium bullets and perfect charge weights, but sloppy brass work will still cost you consistency, reliability, and sometimes safety. The trick is knowing what to sort, what to ignore, and how deep to go based on what you’re trying to accomplish.
This isn’t benchrest voodoo. This is practical brass management that actually works.
⸻
STEP 1: SORTING — DON’T OVERTHINK IT
Sort by caliber first. Always. Mixed calibers destroy decapping pins and patience.
Next decision: headstamp.
Headstamp sorting matters for:
• Rifle ammo
• Near-max loads
• Military vs commercial brass
• Anyone chasing consistency
It usually doesn’t matter for bulk pistol or plinking loads.
Also sort early for:
• Boxer vs Berdan (Berdan gets scrapped immediately)
• Crimped primer pockets (mostly military brass)
If you don’t catch these early, you’ll discover them the hard way during priming.
⸻
HEADSTAMP SORTING FOR PISTOL PLINKING — DO YOU REALLY NEED IT?
For normal pistol plinking ammo, no.
At handgun distances and pressures, the small differences between manufacturers almost never show up on target. Grip, trigger press, sights, and the gun matter far more.
For pistol plinking:
• Caliber sort — yes
• Headstamp sort — no
• Crimped vs non-crimped — yes
• Weight sort — absolutely not
Exceptions:
• Near-max or +P loads
• Accuracy-focused pistol competition
• Military vs commercial brass (mainly for primer pocket issues)
If it feeds, fires, cycles, and hits steel, it’s good ammo.
⸻
STEP 2: CLEANING — FUNCTION OVER SHINE
Dry tumbling is cheap, fast, and good enough for most pistol and general rifle ammo.
Wet tumbling cleans everything — inside, outside, primer pockets. The real benefit is inspection, not shine. Clean brass protects dies and lets you see problems.
Clean before serious inspection or weight sorting. Dirty brass lies to the scale.
⸻
STEP 3: CULLING — THIS IS WHERE QUALITY IS WON
Cull ruthlessly:
• Split or cracked necks
• Deep scratches
• Bulges (especially Glock smile)
• Loose primer pockets
• Signs of head separation
Rifle brass gets the paperclip test.
No exceptions. Brass is cheaper than fingers.
⸻
THE PAPERCLIP TEST — HOW TO SPOT A FAILING RIFLE CASE
Rifle brass stretches every time it’s fired. Over multiple firings, the brass thins just above the case head (the web). This leads to incipient case head separation.
How to do it:
• Bend a paperclip into a small “L”
• Insert it into a clean, empty rifle case
• Drag it down the inside wall toward the base
What you’re feeling for:
• Smooth wall = good brass
• A distinct groove or step just above the web = failing brass
If you feel that groove, the case is done. Scrap it.
A separated case can vent hot gas into the action, damage the bolt, and injure the shooter. There is no safe fix.
⸻
PISTOL BRASS BULGES — WHAT TO FIX AND WHAT TO SCRAP
Unsupported chambers can cause a bulge near the case head.
• Minor bulge that sizes out cleanly → usually fine for plinking
• Bulge that won’t size out or shows a sharp crease → scrap it
Push-through sizing dies remove mild bulges but do not restore brass strength. Repeated bulging means it’s time to retire that case.
⸻
CASE LENGTH — PISTOL VS RIFLE
Pistol brass:
• Rarely needs trimming
• Usually shortens or stays stable
• Trim only if chambering problems appear
Rifle brass:
• Must be monitored and trimmed
• Grows with firing
• Over-length brass raises pressure and causes chambering issues
⸻
STEP 4: WHEN (AND WHEN NOT) TO SORT BRASS BY WEIGHT
Weight sorting controls internal case volume, not magic accuracy.
Worth doing when:
• Precision rifle ammo
• Wildcats or formed brass
• Near-max or compressed loads
• You’re already sorting by headstamp
• You’re chasing ES/SD
Waste of time when:
• Bulk pistol
• Plinking rifle
• Mixed headstamps
• Loads well below max
⸻
WHAT IS A “GOOD” WEIGHT SPREAD?
• Precision rifle: ±0.5 grains
• High-end long range: ±0.3 grains
• Extreme benchrest: ±0.1–0.2 grains
Anything looser than ±1 grain usually isn’t worth the effort.
⸻
MY FAST WEIGHT-SORTING METHOD (TAPE ON THE TABLE)
I put masking tape directly on the bench, laid out in parallel strips, each labeled with a weight range.
Example (.308):
• 168.0–168.9
• 169.0–169.9
• 170.0–170.9
Clean, fired, empty brass only.
Each case goes straight from the scale to the matching tape line. When a line fills, it dumps into a labeled container. No re-sorting, no bins, no confusion. You see the distribution immediately.
I pick one tight group for serious ammo and roll the rest into practice brass.
⸻
“YOU’RE CHASING ES/SD” — WHAT THAT ACTUALLY MEANS
ES (Extreme Spread) and SD (Standard Deviation) measure velocity consistency.
• ES = fastest shot minus slowest shot
• SD = how consistent all shots are around the average
Velocity variation causes vertical stringing, especially at distance.
At 100 yards, you may never notice it.
At 300+ yards, small velocity differences turn into inches.
If you’re not measuring velocity with a chronograph, you’re not actually chasing ES/SD.
⸻
LOOSE PRIMER POCKETS — HARD STOP
Signs:
• Primer seats with little resistance
• Primer drops in easily
• Primer backs out or falls out
Loose primer pockets are not fixable. Scrap the case.
⸻
THE PRIMER FLASH HOLE — NOT THE SAME THING
Flash holes don’t wear out.
Issues that matter:
• Burrs (precision rifle only)
• Off-center holes (cheap brass)
Uniforming is a one-time operation and only worth it for precision rifle ammo.
⸻
MIXED BRASS & PRESSURE — REALITY CHECK
Different cases have different internal volumes.
Less volume = higher pressure.
Mixed brass is fine for mild loads.
Mixed brass plus max loads is risky.
⸻
PRIMER BRAND FIT — COMMON CONFUSION
Different primer brands seat with different resistance. Switching brands mid-batch can make good pockets feel loose or mask early failures.
Confirm the brass before blaming the pocket.
⸻
CARBON FOULING — THE HIDDEN PROBLEM (RIFLE)
Carbon buildup inside necks and at the chamber neck can:
• Change neck tension
• Raise pressure
• Cause unexplained accuracy loss
Often mistaken for a brass problem.
⸻
BRASS LIFE — WHEN TO RETIRE IT
End-of-life indicators:
• Loose primer pockets
• Repeated neck splits
• Pressure signs at normal loads
• Head separation marks
Typical lifespan:
• Pistol: many cycles unless pushed hard
• Rifle: 5–10 firings
• Wildcats/hot loads: shorter
⸻
ANNEALING — MYTH VS REALITY
Annealing helps rifle brass and conversions.
It does not help pistol brass or bad brass.
⸻
PROGRESSIVE PRESS REALITY
Progressive presses magnify brass problems:
• Loose pockets
• Missed crimps
• Bulges
• Mixed primer sizes
Good prep matters more.
⸻
RECOMMENDED WORKFLOW
1. Sort by caliber
2. Clean
3. Inspect and cull
4. Sort by headstamp (if applicable)
5. Sort by weight (if applicable)
6. Prep
7. Label and store
⸻
STORAGE & LABELING
Label brass with:
• Caliber
• Headstamp
• Weight range
• Firing count
Don’t remix sorted brass.
⸻
STOP DOING THIS
• Drilling flash holes
• “Fixing” loose primer pockets
• Weight sorting pistol brass
• Annealing pistol brass
• Chasing shine instead of inspection
⸻
USES FOR CULLED BRASS (DON’T JUST THROW IT AWAY)
Culled brass still has value — just not as live ammo.
Safe and practical uses:
• Scrap metal recycling
• Snap caps for dry fire (inert only, clearly marked)
• Dummy rounds for setup and function checks
• Die setup and press adjustment cases
• Teaching aids showing bad brass examples
• Tumbler and cleaner testing
• Melting into ingots for later use or trade
• Brass washers, shims, and spacers for electronics and shop projects
• Small weights, bushings, or soft vise jaws
What not to do:
• Do NOT reload culled brass
• Do NOT save it “for light loads”
• Do NOT give it away without explaining why it was culled
Once brass is unsafe for firing, it stays unsafe for firing.
⸻
SAFETY NOTE
Brass condition affects pressure.
Mixed brass plus max loads equals risk.
If something feels wrong, scrap it.
⸻
FINAL TAKEAWAY
Sort what matters.
Clean so you can inspect.
Cull without mercy.
Only add steps that serve the goal.
Efficient prep beats obsessive prep every time.
FRIDAY NIGHT RELOADING
Brass Sorting, Cleaning, Culling — How Far to Take It (Without Wasting Time)
Brass prep is where good ammo starts. You can have premium bullets and perfect charge weights, but sloppy brass work will still cost you consistency, reliability, and sometimes safety. The trick is knowing what to sort, what to ignore, and how deep to go based on what you’re trying to accomplish.
This isn’t benchrest voodoo. This is practical brass management that actually works.
⸻
STEP 1: SORTING — DON’T OVERTHINK IT
Sort by caliber first. Always. Mixed calibers destroy decapping pins and patience.
Next decision: headstamp.
Headstamp sorting matters for:
• Rifle ammo
• Near-max loads
• Military vs commercial brass
• Anyone chasing consistency
It usually doesn’t matter for bulk pistol or plinking loads.
Also sort early for:
• Boxer vs Berdan (Berdan gets scrapped immediately)
• Crimped primer pockets (mostly military brass)
If you don’t catch these early, you’ll discover them the hard way during priming.
⸻
HEADSTAMP SORTING FOR PISTOL PLINKING — DO YOU REALLY NEED IT?
For normal pistol plinking ammo, no.
At handgun distances and pressures, the small differences between manufacturers almost never show up on target. Grip, trigger press, sights, and the gun matter far more.
For pistol plinking:
• Caliber sort — yes
• Headstamp sort — no
• Crimped vs non-crimped — yes
• Weight sort — absolutely not
Exceptions:
• Near-max or +P loads
• Accuracy-focused pistol competition
• Military vs commercial brass (mainly for primer pocket issues)
If it feeds, fires, cycles, and hits steel, it’s good ammo.
⸻
STEP 2: CLEANING — FUNCTION OVER SHINE
Dry tumbling is cheap, fast, and good enough for most pistol and general rifle ammo.
Wet tumbling cleans everything — inside, outside, primer pockets. The real benefit is inspection, not shine. Clean brass protects dies and lets you see problems.
Clean before serious inspection or weight sorting. Dirty brass lies to the scale.
⸻
STEP 3: CULLING — THIS IS WHERE QUALITY IS WON
Cull ruthlessly:
• Split or cracked necks
• Deep scratches
• Bulges (especially Glock smile)
• Loose primer pockets
• Signs of head separation
Rifle brass gets the paperclip test.
No exceptions. Brass is cheaper than fingers.
⸻
THE PAPERCLIP TEST — HOW TO SPOT A FAILING RIFLE CASE
Rifle brass stretches every time it’s fired. Over multiple firings, the brass thins just above the case head (the web). This leads to incipient case head separation.
How to do it:
• Bend a paperclip into a small “L”
• Insert it into a clean, empty rifle case
• Drag it down the inside wall toward the base
What you’re feeling for:
• Smooth wall = good brass
• A distinct groove or step just above the web = failing brass
If you feel that groove, the case is done. Scrap it.
A separated case can vent hot gas into the action, damage the bolt, and injure the shooter. There is no safe fix.
⸻
PISTOL BRASS BULGES — WHAT TO FIX AND WHAT TO SCRAP
Unsupported chambers can cause a bulge near the case head.
• Minor bulge that sizes out cleanly → usually fine for plinking
• Bulge that won’t size out or shows a sharp crease → scrap it
Push-through sizing dies remove mild bulges but do not restore brass strength. Repeated bulging means it’s time to retire that case.
⸻
CASE LENGTH — PISTOL VS RIFLE
Pistol brass:
• Rarely needs trimming
• Usually shortens or stays stable
• Trim only if chambering problems appear
Rifle brass:
• Must be monitored and trimmed
• Grows with firing
• Over-length brass raises pressure and causes chambering issues
⸻
STEP 4: WHEN (AND WHEN NOT) TO SORT BRASS BY WEIGHT
Weight sorting controls internal case volume, not magic accuracy.
Worth doing when:
• Precision rifle ammo
• Wildcats or formed brass
• Near-max or compressed loads
• You’re already sorting by headstamp
• You’re chasing ES/SD
Waste of time when:
• Bulk pistol
• Plinking rifle
• Mixed headstamps
• Loads well below max
⸻
WHAT IS A “GOOD” WEIGHT SPREAD?
• Precision rifle: ±0.5 grains
• High-end long range: ±0.3 grains
• Extreme benchrest: ±0.1–0.2 grains
Anything looser than ±1 grain usually isn’t worth the effort.
⸻
MY FAST WEIGHT-SORTING METHOD (TAPE ON THE TABLE)
I put masking tape directly on the bench, laid out in parallel strips, each labeled with a weight range.
Example (.308):
• 168.0–168.9
• 169.0–169.9
• 170.0–170.9
Clean, fired, empty brass only.
Each case goes straight from the scale to the matching tape line. When a line fills, it dumps into a labeled container. No re-sorting, no bins, no confusion. You see the distribution immediately.
I pick one tight group for serious ammo and roll the rest into practice brass.
⸻
“YOU’RE CHASING ES/SD” — WHAT THAT ACTUALLY MEANS
ES (Extreme Spread) and SD (Standard Deviation) measure velocity consistency.
• ES = fastest shot minus slowest shot
• SD = how consistent all shots are around the average
Velocity variation causes vertical stringing, especially at distance.
At 100 yards, you may never notice it.
At 300+ yards, small velocity differences turn into inches.
If you’re not measuring velocity with a chronograph, you’re not actually chasing ES/SD.
⸻
LOOSE PRIMER POCKETS — HARD STOP
Signs:
• Primer seats with little resistance
• Primer drops in easily
• Primer backs out or falls out
Loose primer pockets are not fixable. Scrap the case.
⸻
THE PRIMER FLASH HOLE — NOT THE SAME THING
Flash holes don’t wear out.
Issues that matter:
• Burrs (precision rifle only)
• Off-center holes (cheap brass)
Uniforming is a one-time operation and only worth it for precision rifle ammo.
⸻
MIXED BRASS & PRESSURE — REALITY CHECK
Different cases have different internal volumes.
Less volume = higher pressure.
Mixed brass is fine for mild loads.
Mixed brass plus max loads is risky.
⸻
PRIMER BRAND FIT — COMMON CONFUSION
Different primer brands seat with different resistance. Switching brands mid-batch can make good pockets feel loose or mask early failures.
Confirm the brass before blaming the pocket.
⸻
CARBON FOULING — THE HIDDEN PROBLEM (RIFLE)
Carbon buildup inside necks and at the chamber neck can:
• Change neck tension
• Raise pressure
• Cause unexplained accuracy loss
Often mistaken for a brass problem.
⸻
BRASS LIFE — WHEN TO RETIRE IT
End-of-life indicators:
• Loose primer pockets
• Repeated neck splits
• Pressure signs at normal loads
• Head separation marks
Typical lifespan:
• Pistol: many cycles unless pushed hard
• Rifle: 5–10 firings
• Wildcats/hot loads: shorter
⸻
ANNEALING — MYTH VS REALITY
Annealing helps rifle brass and conversions.
It does not help pistol brass or bad brass.
⸻
PROGRESSIVE PRESS REALITY
Progressive presses magnify brass problems:
• Loose pockets
• Missed crimps
• Bulges
• Mixed primer sizes
Good prep matters more.
⸻
RECOMMENDED WORKFLOW
1. Sort by caliber
2. Clean
3. Inspect and cull
4. Sort by headstamp (if applicable)
5. Sort by weight (if applicable)
6. Prep
7. Label and store
⸻
STORAGE & LABELING
Label brass with:
• Caliber
• Headstamp
• Weight range
• Firing count
Don’t remix sorted brass.
⸻
STOP DOING THIS
• Drilling flash holes
• “Fixing” loose primer pockets
• Weight sorting pistol brass
• Annealing pistol brass
• Chasing shine instead of inspection
⸻
USES FOR CULLED BRASS (DON’T JUST THROW IT AWAY)
Culled brass still has value — just not as live ammo.
Safe and practical uses:
• Scrap metal recycling
• Snap caps for dry fire (inert only, clearly marked)
• Dummy rounds for setup and function checks
• Die setup and press adjustment cases
• Teaching aids showing bad brass examples
• Tumbler and cleaner testing
• Melting into ingots for later use or trade
• Brass washers, shims, and spacers for electronics and shop projects
• Small weights, bushings, or soft vise jaws
What not to do:
• Do NOT reload culled brass
• Do NOT save it “for light loads”
• Do NOT give it away without explaining why it was culled
Once brass is unsafe for firing, it stays unsafe for firing.
⸻
SAFETY NOTE
Brass condition affects pressure.
Mixed brass plus max loads equals risk.
If something feels wrong, scrap it.
⸻
FINAL TAKEAWAY
Sort what matters.
Clean so you can inspect.
Cull without mercy.
Only add steps that serve the goal.
Efficient prep beats obsessive prep every time.