Because of carburization, quenching(heat treatment of steel) and tempering of quenched steel.
because steel is lesser conductive to bronze
Brass, bronze and stainless steel are alloys. Tin is a metal / an element.
We combine pure metals with other metals to create metal alloys. An example of an alloy is steel, which is mainly composed of iron and carbon. This is stronger than pure iron, and is mostly used as a building material.
Titanium, it is lighter than steel, stronger than steel, and less bioreactive than steel.
Because steel remains magnetised
steel is an alloy of iron and about 0.1%-0.3% carbon. bronze is an alloy of copper+ tin....( not steel)
The bronze age was better than the steel age because they had better weapons better sheilds and better warriors like the Spartans
Wrought iron is not as strong as hardened bronze. If you work the iron ore into steel, then it would be harder and stronger than bronze.
not much except its better than bronze, iron and steel. ~Angelsblade0~
Bronze is not stronger than steel, broze was developed around 3500 BC and steel much latter, both are alloys.
It is a sword made from bronze, rather than from steel.
Bronze and steel are both names for alloys. These alloys can consist of a great many different elements and exhibit vary varying properties but in general for most of the bronze and steel alloys, bronze is a better conductor of heat than steel.
No. A silver metal is better than a bronze metal.
Bronze doesn't spark or flake. In some cases, bronze hammers are used to tap things like bearings into place to avoid contamination from chips flying off like you get with a steel hammer.
If steel rusts faster than copper or bronze, then which of copper or bronze rusts faster than the other one?
no green<bronze<silver<gold
nylon or steel for the inside part than they wrap ,steel nickel or bronze around it.
Yes. Not as strong as steel but still strong.