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Brass

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Brass is an alloy of copper and zinc. Some types of brass are called bronzes, despite their high zinc content.

Brass is a versatile manufacturing material because of its hardness and workability. Alpha brasses, with less than 40% zinc, are malleable and can be worked cold. Beta brasses, with a higher zinc content, can only be worked hot, but are harder and stronger. White brass, with more than 45% zinc, is too brittle for general use. Some types of brass have other metals added to modify their properties. Brass has a yellow colour, somewhat similar to gold. Because of this, and its relative resistance to tarnishing it is used as a decoration.

The malleablity and acoustic properties of brass have made it the metal of choice for musical instruments such as the trumpet. Instruments where the sound is produced by the vibration of the musician's lips are collectively known as brass instruments.

Brass has been known to man since prehistoric times, long before zinc itself was discovered. It was produced by melting copper together with calamine, a zinc ore. During this process, the zinc is extracted from the calamine and instantly mixes with the copper. Pure zinc, on the other hand, is too reactive to be produced by ancient metalworking techniques.

In some English dialects brass means money. There is an expression, "where there's muck there's brass". As brass is sometimes used as an inexpensive substitute for gold, the term "brassy" has come to mean showy and tasteless.

In the King James version of the Bible, there are different versions of brass mentioned. In 2 Chronicles, (written around 400 to 500 BC) 4vs16 speaks of a "bright brass" in the verse, "The pots also, and the shovels, and the fleshhooks, and all their instruments, did Hu'ram his father make to king Solomon for the house of the LORD of bright brass."

See also