Bronze is made from lead, tin, and copper; if you leave out the copper you get an impoverished bronze.
Solder
70/30 (70% tin, 30% lead) the more lead in an alloy the higher the melting point is.
The official definition of the word pewter is "a gray alloy of tin with copper and antimony (formerly, tin and lead)."
Pure lead melts at 327.5°C, but it is often alloyed with tin which melts at about 232°C. The melting point of a lead-tin alloy would be somewhere between these two values, depending on the proportions of each element in the alloy.
solder--its an alloy used 4 joining metals
Tin- Tin (Sn) is the base, with lead, copper and antimony as alloying elements.
iron
Solder
Alloy of Tin and Lead
Solder Also Pewter is a malleable metal alloy, traditionally 85-99% tin, with the remainder consisting of copper, antimony, bismuth and lead.
Solder wire is an alloy of tin and lead.
Solder
Pewter
Fuse is an alloy of lead and tin.
No. An alloy is a mixture of two or more metals. Tin is a metal by itself. Tin can still be made into an alloy. Such alloys are pewter or solder.
false
Solder, (lead + tin); Brass, (copper + zinc); Bronze, (copper + tin).
70/30 (70% tin, 30% lead) the more lead in an alloy the higher the melting point is.