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Definition of Leaded bronze
1. Noun. Bronze to which 1-4% lead is added.
Lexicographical Neighbors of Leaded Bronze
Literary usage of Leaded bronze
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. Transactions of the American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical and (1919)
"... the former being aluminum bronze with sand stirred in intentionally and the
latter an ordinary leaded bronze that had burned into the mold excessively ..."
2. Chemistry of Materials of the Machine and Building Industries by Robert Benjamin Leighou (1917)
"A leaded bronze that is used to a considerable extent for bearings has the
following composition: copper, 64 per cent.; tin, ..."
3. Chemistry of Materials of the Machine and Building Industries by Robert Benjamin Leighou (1917)
"A leaded bronze that is used to a considerable extent for bearings has the
following composition: copper, 64 per cent.; tin, 5 per cent.; lead, ..."
4. The Chrysokamino Metallurgy Workshop and Its Territory by Philip P. Betancourt (2006)
"... Giallo are made of leaded arsenical copper, averaging 2.01% arsenic and 9.05%
lead, and two are of leaded bronze, averaging 9.55% tin and 9.33% lead. ..."
5. The Manners and Customs of the Ancient Egyptians by John Gardner Wilkinson (1878)
"Roman period, many leaded bronze weights 1 Woodcut No. 413, d. tians did not use
the steel-yard till the [The balance was called max", and was of which are ..."
6. Machinery's Encyclopedia: A Work of Reference Covering Practical Mathematics by Erik Oberg, Franklin Day Jones (1917)
"... IV, 196-3 torch for, IV, 198-1 Lead-cam for automatic screw machines, I, 545-7
leaded bronze, II, 207-2 Leaded gun-metal, II, 207-2 Leading current, II, ..."
7. Transactions by American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers, Metallurgical Society of AIME, Society of Mining Engineers of AIME., Society for Mining, Metallurgy, and Exploration (U.S.). (1919)
"... in intentionally and the latter an ordinary leaded bronze that had burned into
the mold excessively and so become mixed with sand at the surface. ..."