LIST
FEGURÐ OG VELLÍÐAN
HANDVERK
MENNING OG SAGA
SKEMMTUN
UMHVERFI
MATUR OG DRYKKUR
GRÆN FRAMTÍÐ
ÖFUGVERKFRÆÐI
VÍSINDI
ÍÞRÓTTIR
TÆKNI
KLÆÐANLEG TÆKNI
Alloying Bronze (Cu + Sn) — The Bronze Age Begins
Forge

Búin til af

Forge

17. March 2026

Alloying Bronze (Cu + Sn) — The Bronze Age Begins

The alloy that gave an entire era its name. Mix 88-90% copper with 10-12% tin to create bronze — harder than either component, castable into complex shapes, and the dominant material of human civilization for 2,000 years. This blueprint covers the metallurgical principles of alloying and casting a bronze tool.

Leiðbeiningar

4

Metallurgy of Bronze

Why Bronze is Superior

Bronze is a solid solution alloy — tin atoms dissolve into the copper crystal lattice, distorting it and blocking dislocation movement. Result:

PropertyCopperBronze (10% Sn)Improvement
Vickers Hardness40-5070-1502-3× harder
Tensile Strength210 MPa300-500 MPa2× stronger
Melting Point1085°C~950°CEasier to melt!
CastabilityPoor (gassy)Excellent (fluid)Complex shapes
CorrosionForms green patinaHighly resistantLasts millennia

The Ideal Ratio

Ancient smiths converged on ~10% tin, 90% copper through trial and error:

  • <8% tin: Too soft, barely better than copper
  • 10-12% tin: Optimal hardness, good castability, golden colour
  • 15-20% tin: Very hard but brittle — good for bells and mirrors, bad for tools
  • >20% tin: Extremely brittle, shatters on impact
5

The Alloying Process

Preparation

  1. Weigh your metals: 900g copper + 100g tin for classic 10% bronze.
  2. Cut copper into small pieces (1-2cm) for faster melting.
  3. Tin can be in any form — it melts so fast it dissolves almost instantly.

Melting Sequence (CRITICAL)

  1. Melt the copper first. Load copper into pre-heated crucible in the kiln. Bring to full liquid (1085°C+).
  2. Add tin LAST. When copper is fully molten, add tin to the surface. Tin melts instantly (232°C) and dissolves into the copper.
  3. Stir with a pre-heated dry stick or ceramic rod. Ensure uniform mixing — 10 seconds of stirring is enough.
  4. NEVER add copper to molten tin — the temperature differential causes violent boiling and spatter.

Signs of Good Bronze

  • Surface should be bright and mirror-like when fully liquid
  • Colour: golden-yellow (not coppery red = too little tin, not silvery = too much tin)
  • Flows smoothly when poured — bronze is more fluid than pure copper

Pour

  1. Skim slag from surface.
  2. Pour into pre-heated mold in one continuous stream.
  3. Bronze has excellent castability — it fills fine details that pure copper cannot.
6

Finishing and the Innovation Leap

Post-Casting

  1. Allow to cool naturally in the mold.
  2. Remove from mold, break off sprues.
  3. Cold-work the edges: bronze work-hardens even more effectively than copper.
  4. Grind and polish the working edge.

Testing Your Bronze

  • Ring test: Strike with a stick — good bronze produces a clear, bell-like ring. Dull thud = bad alloy or porosity.
  • Edge test: A bronze axe keeps its edge 3-5× longer than copper.
  • Colour: Golden-yellow when polished. Develops green patina over time (same as the Statue of Liberty).

The Civilization Impact

Bronze changed everything:

  • Agriculture: Bronze ploughshares broke harder soil → more food → larger populations
  • Warfare: Bronze swords and armour dominated for 2,000 years
  • Art: Bronze casting enabled the first complex sculptures (lost-wax casting)
  • Trade: Tin scarcity created the first long-distance trade networks

But bronze has a fatal flaw: tin scarcity. When the Bronze Age trade networks collapsed (~1200 BCE), civilizations that couldn't get tin were forced to master a harder, more abundant metal — iron. See Blueprint 08: Building a Bloomery & Smelting Iron.

Efni

  • Copper (smelted or purchased) - 900 gsStaðgengill
    Skoða
  • Tin (smelted or purchased) - 100 gsStaðgengill
    Skoða
  • Charcoal - 12 kgsStaðgengill
    Skoða
  • Crucible - 1 pieceStaðgengill
    Skoða
  • Lost Wax Casting Kit - 1 kitStaðgengill
    Skoða
  • Aluminum Bronze C954 (Reference) - 1 referenceStaðgengill
    Skoða

Nauðsynleg verkfæri

  • Kiln (from Blueprint 02)Staðgengill
    Skoða
  • BellowsStaðgengill
    Skoða
  • Crucible tongsStaðgengill
    Skoða
  • Casting moldStaðgengill
    Skoða
  • AnvilStaðgengill
    Skoða
  • Ball peen hammerStaðgengill
    Skoða

Efni úr tengdum teikningum

CC0 opinbert ríki

Þessi teikning er gefin út undir CC0. Þér er frjálst að afrita, breyta, dreifa og nota þetta verk í hvaða tilgangi sem er, án þess að biðja um leyfi.

Studdu smiðinn með því að kaupa vörur í gegnum teikningu hans þar sem hann fær þóknun smiða sem seljendur ákvarða, eða búðu til nýja endurskoðun á þessari teikningu og tengdu hana sem tengingu í þinni eigin teikningu til að deila tekjum.

Umræða

(0)

Skrá inn til að taka þátt í umræðunni

Hleður athugasemdum...