After a year of metallurgy, Ill offer this since my final was a dissertation on PbSn alloys for improved bullet strength: Pb and Sn are a solid solution, with regard to bullets. Forget the idea of Antimony melting point at very high temps. The Antimony you need to introduce is done at high temps and is always alloyed--- not at your home! You don't have the necessary STUFF to make lead and antimony marry. Once married the Pb is a carrier of the antimony, thus Rotometals sells antimonial Lead! A way to get your antimony w/o the marital problems. Solid solutions are different, they are not ionic/covalent bonded, its more like mixing salt and pepper. With heating and cooling the position of the antimony is controlled, I.e. whether Antimony is wrapping lead crystals or sitting in chunks here and there. Using VERY non scientific terms here for sake of clarity. You can control antimony position with a good deal of accuracy based on its cooling curve and start temps, just like you control steel's crystalline structure--- read up on conversion of ferritic iron/carbon to pearlite and conversion to martensite. Its all in how you heat and cool as to what the solid solution does. Water quench a bullet, heat treat a bullet, air cool a bullet, all control Antimonial Position directly!!! Now I think you would be venturing into uncharted territory with adding boron Hex to lead, it would be considered an alloy, an inclusion (like carbon flecks in a diamond), it would alter the bullets brinell hardness and strength for a given alloy and may not enter a solution with either antimony, lead, tin, zinc, etc that may be also present in your bullet alloy, until maybe those materials are at vapor stages, meaning, you can't get boron suspended before your lead turns to a gas. I'm not a chemist. You can add crap till the cows come home but think what happens when you flux your bullet melt. You add WOOD, parafin, bees wax, carnuba, and various salts that float. That boron is AWFUL light and not soluble potentially and it won't change state (not hot enough to go from solid to liquid to gas) so........ FLOATS, TEMP, NON-SOLUBLE---- seems like its dead Except when you coat the bullet. You don't want the boron in the bullet you want it at the surface. Lee Liquid Alox, think coating, which is how boron is traditionally applied to bullets. Ill bet a doughnut if you melt a boron coated bullet in your pot, the boron will flux off. Impregnation, not solution is the key to use. See ya
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