Roamin Wade asked:
Can I put whole loaded bullets into a tumbler to polish the corrosion off of them?
Be careful to distinguish "tarnish" of brass cases from "corrosion". Tarnish is simply the oxidation of the surface layer of copper in the case which produces a brown patina like an old penny. Corrosion involves an "attack" on the structure of the case involving both the copper and the zinc. It will generally be colorful, but may also manifest as a black spot that goes well below the surface of the brass.
That said, my answer is:
Yes, provided what you are describing as "corrosion" is limited to the surface of the brass. If tumbling - or after tumbling - polishing with Brasso or a similar cleaner will not remove the defect, the round should be salvaged or discarded.
Tumbling brass will
not cause it to ignite. It will
not cause the powder to break into smaller pieces causing excessive pressure. It will
not cause the bullet to loosen. Ammunition manufacturers tumble their rounds before packaging them to ensure they are cosmetically acceptable to the consumer. If tumbling ammunition was a "No-No", do you think the manufacturers would do it?
Of course not. The imagined - but yet to be demonstrated - effects of tumbling on loaded round are among the reloading community's equivalent of "urban myths".
They are illusion and should be ignored.
And as we have already seen, there is no greater urban myth within the reloading community than the one claiming Brasso and other cleaners that contain ammonia will damage brass. The reality is that exposure to small amounts of ammonia for short periods of time poses no threat for cartridge brass made after the late 1920's.
In the 19th Century, the British Army in India found their cartridge cases were developing cracks after being stored in the horse stables for months at a time. This is called "season cracking" because it only appeared after the ammunition had been stored in the stables for months. It was later determined that storing ammunition in the stables where horse urine produced copious amounts of ammonia was causing cracking in UNANNEALED cases (
note the cases affected were NOT annealed). The cracks were caused when some of the copper in the brass reacted with the ammonia along the unrelieved stress cracks that were created when the case was formed.
Since the late 1920's, when the phenomenon of "season cracking" was scientifically explained, ALL cartridge cases have been annealed during manufacture. Thus, the circumstances necessary for "season cracking" to occur NO LONGER EXIST. Whether it is even
possible for a case made in the last century to EVER be susceptible to "season cracking" is doubtful. But, it is clear the tiny amount of ammonia in cleaners like Brasso and the short time the brass is exposed to the ammonia (minutes instead of months) is in no way comparable to the conditions that lead to "season cracking".
Brasso is NOT "
bad for brass". The circumstances that made ammonia a threat simply NO LONGER EXIST. Nevertheless, the "old wives' tales" seem to have a life of their own.