Wes/Tex said:You can temper lead harder or anneal it softer using heat and slow or fast cooling :wink: :haha:
Wes/Tex said:You can temper lead harder or anneal it softer using heat and slow or fast cooling but tumbling would never create that kind of temperature unless your tumbler was jet powered! :wink: :haha:
Wes/Tex said:You can temper lead harder or anneal it softer using heat and slow or fast cooling but tumbling would never create that kind of temperature unless your tumbler was jet powered! :wink: :haha:
Bo T said:Does tumbling the lead balls cause surface hardening?
Just curious.
Pure lead, it doesn'tRichard Eames said:How does the cooling rate of molten lead change the chemical makeup of it???
Doesn't change it chemically, but lead balls heated in an oven at about 400 degrees for half an hour and carefully poured into cold water will created a hardened surface...the centers will still be soft. Have played with it but rally found no great use for the end product outside of possible deeper penetration. Alloy mixed balls will soften slightly if heated the same way then allowed to cool by turning off heat and letting them cool with oven door cracked open.Richard Eames said:Wes/Tex said:You can temper lead harder or anneal it softer using heat and slow or fast cooling but tumbling would never create that kind of temperature unless your tumbler was jet powered! :wink: :haha:
How does the cooling rate of molten lead change the chemical makeup of it???
I'm only speaking of slightly hardening the balls surface with heat tempering...it will not make the entire ball a harder consistency like adding alloy.Idaho Ron said:Wes/Tex said:You can temper lead harder or anneal it softer using heat and slow or fast cooling but tumbling would never create that kind of temperature unless your tumbler was jet powered! :wink: :haha:
I will agree that with pure lead it can not harden unless alloy is added.
Once alloy is added that mix can be hardened by quenching it in water. Or it can be heat treated in an oven. Age will also harden alloy, the more alloy in the mix the harder it will get with age, or quenching. I have seen bullets that run 6 to 7 BHN ( a small amount of alloy) turn into 8 by quenching. If you quench a 5 BHN bullet it will not change to any extent.
Wes/Tex said:Doesn't change it chemically, but lead balls heated in an oven at about 400 degrees for half an hour and carefully poured into cold water will created a hardened surface...the centers will still be soft. Have played with it but rally found no great use for the end product outside of possible deeper penetration. Alloy mixed balls will soften slightly if heated the same way then allowed to cool by turning off heat and letting them cool with oven door cracked open.Richard Eames said:Wes/Tex said:You can temper lead harder or anneal it softer using heat and slow or fast cooling but tumbling would never create that kind of temperature unless your tumbler was jet powered! :wink: :haha:
How does the cooling rate of molten lead change the chemical makeup of it???
Wes/Tex said:lead balls heated in an oven at about 400 degrees for half an hour and carefully poured into cold water will created a hardened surface...the centers will still be soft.
Wes/Tex said:I'm only speaking of slightly hardening the balls surface with heat tempering...it will not make the entire ball a harder consistency like adding alloy.Idaho Ron said:Wes/Tex said:You can temper lead harder or anneal it softer using heat and slow or fast cooling but tumbling would never create that kind of temperature unless your tumbler was jet powered! :wink: :haha:
I will agree that with pure lead it can not harden unless alloy is added.
Once alloy is added that mix can be hardened by quenching it in water. Or it can be heat treated in an oven. Age will also harden alloy, the more alloy in the mix the harder it will get with age, or quenching. I have seen bullets that run 6 to 7 BHN ( a small amount of alloy) turn into 8 by quenching. If you quench a 5 BHN bullet it will not change to any extent.
Correct.Idaho Ron said:Pure lead will not surface harden.
Attempts to strengthen lead by reducing the grain size or by cold working (strain hardening) have proven unsuccessful. Lead-tin alloys, for example, may re-crystallize immediately and completely at room temperature. Lead-silver alloys respond in the same manner within two weeks.
Transformations that are induced in steel by heat treatment do not occur in lead alloys, and strengthening by ordering phenomena, such as in the formation of lattice superstructures, has no practical significance in typical lead alloys. In one study of possible binary lead alloys it was found that the following elements, in the order listed, provided successively greater amounts of solid-solution hardening: thallium, bismuth, tin, cadmium, antimony, lithium, arsenic, calcium, zinc, copper, and barium.
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