Bronze — the alloy that defined an entire era of human civilisation — remains one of the most technically sophisticated and commercially valuable materials in modern industry.
A copper-based alloy enriched primarily with tin, and often with aluminium, manganese, or silicon, bronze offers a rare combination of strength, wear resistance, and corrosion tolerance that few metals can match. In industrial trading, it is a specialist product commanding consistent demand across engineering, marine, and artistic applications.
Bronze ingots & billets — primary feedstock for foundries and extruders; supplied in a range of alloy compositions tailored to specific mechanical or casting requirements.
Bronze rods & bars — precision-drawn or extruded semi-finished products used in the manufacture of bearings, bushings, hydraulic components, and valve bodies.
Bronze sheets & plates — flat-rolled material used in architectural cladding, decorative applications, marine hardware, and precision-engineered components.
Bronze tubes & pipes — used in hydraulic systems, marine fittings, heat exchangers, and industrial fluid handling equipment.
Bronze profiles & extrusions — custom-shaped sections for specialist engineering assemblies and decorative architectural elements.
Bronze wire — applied in mesh production, spring manufacturing, and specialist electrical contact applications.
Phosphor bronze — a tin-phosphorus alloy variant offering superior spring properties and fatigue resistance; widely used in electrical connectors, springs, and precision instruments.
Bronze scrap — graded post-industrial material from machined components, cast parts, and industrial equipment; a high-value secondary feedstock for bronze foundries.
Bronze shavings & turnings — machining by-products from engineering and manufacturing operations, traded by alloy type and tin content.
Exceptional wear and friction resistance — bronze outperforms most metals in sliding contact applications, making it the default choice for bearings, bushings, and gears under heavy load
Outstanding performance in seawater — one of the few alloys that resists marine corrosion over extended periods, critical for naval and offshore engineering
Non-sparking properties — bronze tools and components are safe for use in explosive or flammable environments where ferrous metals pose a risk
Timeless aesthetic quality — the warm, distinctive tone of bronze makes it a premium material for sculpture, architecture, and decorative hardware