Sorry - should have specified. Those were dry tumbled with corn cob.
So case polishing ,as corncob smooths brass effectively would account for more consistent release .
Have any of you ever tired BAM ?. It's coefficient of friction is less than half that of PTFE .
The “ceramic alloy” is created by combining a metal alloy of boron, aluminium and magnesium (AlMgB14) with titanium boride (TiB2). It is the hardest material after diamond and cubic boron nitride.
I've been working for several years with a couple of research and commercial companies ,trying to get a PLVD inside vacuum chamber deposition in Dies and eventually inside a barrel . Mere microns in thickness less than half the friction of PTFE ,with Diamond like hardness . SUPERIOR METALLURGY and Ledes which wouldn't fissure ,not to mention bores which could go 200K- 500K rounds ?.
Doing external coating IS and has been being done for a number of years . Getting the laser pulsed vapor evenly dispersed inside a small cylinder is proving DIFFICULT to say the least . Cutting edges ,tools, parts , firing pins , BCG piece of cake .
What’s almost as hard as diamond, slicker than Teflon and “green” enough to reduce the United States’ industrial energy consumption by trillions of BTUs a year? The answer is BAM – a ceramic alloy created by combining a mix of boron, aluminum and magnesium with titanium diboride. The world’s third hardest material, next to diamond and cubic boron nitride, BAM is as slippery as it is strong. With a 0.02 coefficient of friction, it is substantially slicker than Teflon (0.05) and lubricated steel (0.16). Discovered accidentally in 1999 by two researchers at DOE’s Ames Laboratory, BAM has now grown into the nanocoating superstar of a four-year, $3-million project designed to lower industrial energy usage by reducing machine friction.
Description of AlMgB14 Powder
Aluminum boride or Al3Mg3B56, commonly known as BAM, is a compound of aluminum, magnesium, and boron. Although its nominal formula is AlMgB14, its chemical composition is closer to Al0.75Mg0.75B14. It is a highly wear-resistant ceramic alloy with an extremely low sliding friction coefficient, reaching a record value of 0.04 in the unlubricated AlMgB14-TiB2 composite material, and a record value of 0.02 in the lubricated AlMgB14-TiB2 composite material. BAM was first reported in 1970. It has an orthogonal structure and each unit cell has four icosahedral B12 units. The thermal expansion coefficient of this super hard material is comparable to other widely used materials such as steel and concrete. TRUNNANO is a trusted global Aluminum-Magnesium Boride BAM AlMgB14 Powder supplier. Feel free to send an inquiry about the latest price of AlMgB14 at any time.