9mm, 380 and 38 Super Brass Sorting

jsflagstad

New member
Just finished sorting 9mm, 380 and 38 Super brass. About 300 9mm, 200 38 Super and about 100 380 mixed in.. Talk about an eye workout!

I pass it under a magnification light to easier see the head stamp, but still takes some time. Most of the 38 super brass was nickel so that made it a bit easier but the little 380's really like to look like 9mm after awhile.

Anyone else have a better method?
 

DannyB1954

New member
It may take longer, but how about a balance scale. I see them on ebay all the time. Or use a beam type powder scale set for the weight of the 9mm shell. If you put a shell on the scale and it weighs less it is a 380, if it weighs the same it is a 9mm, if it weighs more, it's 38 super.

If they are different lengths, line them up in a row, (push them against the back of your bench or a piece of wood), and put a straight edge across the tops. The 38 super are almost 23 mm long, the 9mm is 19mm and the 380 is 17mm long.

I don't know that any of these will work for you, but good luck with it.
 
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Forrest68

New member
wellafter sorten nearly 1000 pieces of brass mostly 9mm,40 s&w, 45 acp, and a few .380 mixed in, I now try to keep my brass seperate when I go shooting, gather up my 9mm put it in one bag, then the 45acp or 40 s&w into another bag. Insteadof throwing it all into one container and sorten later. Save a good amount of time
 

Overscore

New member
I personally enjoy throwing it all in one big triage bucket. A) It allows for more time shooting at the range, since brass pickup consists of just grabbing everything I see and throwing it in a bag. B) When the kitty litter bucket is full and it's time to sort it all out, I put on some music, break out a cigar, and enjoy a few beers while doing my sorting. In the end, it all must be sorted, so I'd rather do the sorting with beers in my garage than on my knees at the range when I'm up against the clock to get to work.
 

DannyB1954

New member
Just thought of something else. You can use a 3/4" open end wrench as a gauge. 19mm and 3/4" are real close, (3/4" = 19.05 mm). If you cant fit the shell into the opening it is a 38 Super, if it fits snug, it is 9mm, if it fits real loose, it is a 380.
 

Jim Watson

New member
Saw a video the other day.

Get some .40 ammo box inserts, the hard plastic with square pockets, not the molded Styrofoam. Just dump handfuls of brass over an insert, shaking it to settle cases into the pockets. Different calibers will be immediately obvious.

I'm going to be dumpster diving at the range to find some of those trays.
 

jsflagstad

New member
Wow! Some pretty good tips here. Thanks everyone. I guess I knew what I was getting into when I started reloading for all of these calibers as well as 40 S&W. A few tips always help.
 

rodfac

New member
I've got a Glock 23 as well, and both my wife and I get good range practice with a Lone Wolf 9mm barrel. Accuracy is every bit as good as with the .40 barrel. Good luck with yours. Best Regards, Rod
 

jmorris

New member
My sorter will sort 38 super, 9 mm and 380 from one another.

sorter.jpg


This is a video of how it works, when I first tested it.

http://s121.photobucket.com/user/jmorrismetal/media/sorterhopper.mp4.html

It takes about 15 min to sort a 5 gallon buck of brass.
 
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