by raimundo » 9 Oct 2009 9:44
One other thing about the brass is its temper, it may be work hardened from being rolled to sheet form before being stamped and machined into a key blank.
I once knew a locksmith who put some brass key blanks into a selfcleaning oven and cycled the cleaning. what he got out was brass so annealed that it was too soft for impressioning.
it tended to tear off quickly at the shoulder, and it was just really soft.
brass is copper and zinc, copper is a red metal and zinc is a white one, so it comes out yellow. high brass is up to 60 percent copper, and low brass is 40 percent copper.
other metals are sometimes in the alloy, such as lead which makes it easy to machine. sort of self lubricating.
brass is very different from the ancient bronze, the first manmade alloy to have its own historical age. the bronze age.
Bronze is capable of being very hard in some of its alloys, such as phosphor bronze etc.
bronze is mostly copper with a small part tin, and of course some other things in some of the alloys.
dont know the relevant metalurgy though, ductile, malleable, conductive, what are the other properties?
Wake up and smell the Kafka!!!