1. Hōʻikeʻike
Kā mākou C90300 is a widely used tin-bronze casting alloy that delivers a practical combination of good castability, Ke kū'ē neiʻo Corrosionion (nui loa ma nā wahi moana), bearing/wear behavior and satisfactory mechanical strength.
It is specified for bushings, Nā'āpana'āpana, Nā Vilves, gears and other components where service loading, sliding contact and corrosion resistance are primary drivers.
2. What is Bronze UNS C90300?
UNS C90300 is a cast tin bronze alloy in the UNS ('Ōnaehana helu helu) ʻO kaʻohana o nā koho balota.
It is formulated for foundry use and is widely specified where a balance of whola, Ke kū'ē neiʻo Corrosionion (particularly in marine and water-handling environments), good bearing/wear behavior and reasonable mechanical strength koiʻia.
In practice C90300 is chosen for components such as bushings, moe 'ana, pump and valve parts, small gears and marine fittings where sliding contact, embedability and resistance to seawater or wet corrosion are important.

Key features and metallurgical character
- Maikaʻi maikaʻi. C90300 pours and fills molds predictably in sand, shell and investment processes, enabling reasonably thin sections and good surface detail when processed correctly.
- Tin-strengthened matrix. Tin acts as a substitutional alloying element in copper, raising hardness, wear resistance and strength relative to plain copper while preserving ductility sufficient for many bearing and structural uses.
- Bearing and tribological performance. ʻO ka hoʻolahaʻana o ka allolo conformability and embedability—it will accept small contaminant particles into the softer bronze matrix rather than score a harder mating shaft, making it suitable for plain bearings and bushings under boundary or mixed lubrication.
- Excellent wet-environment corrosion resistance. Tin bronzes resist general corrosion and perform well in seawater and many industrial aqueous environments; they are less prone to dezincification or rapid localized attack than many brasses.
- Not precipitation-hardening. Mechanical properties are established primarily by composition and solidification/microstructure; C90300 is not normally subject to strengthening by solution/aging treatments.
Stress-relief or annealing operations are used mainly for dimensional stability or ductility adjustments. - ʻO ka manikini uila. Tin improves chip formation and machinability relative to many high-strength copper alloys; carbide tooling and standard bronze machining practices are appropriate for production work.
3. Alloy identity and typical chemistry
Values are presented as typical weight-percent ranges used for design and procurement; always confirm exact limits with the foundry’s mill/certified analysis for any critical application.
| Mea | Kūleʻa maʻamau (wt%) | Hana / hopena |
| UNS designation | C90300 | Unified Numbering System identity for this cast tin-bronze. |
| keleawe (Cu) | Kaulike (~86.0 – 89.0%) | Nā Pākuʻi Base Metal; provides matrix, thermal/electrical properties and ductility. |
| Kū (Sno) | 7.5 - 9.0% | Principal strengthening and wear/corrosion-resistant element in the alloy. |
| Zinc (Zn) | 3.0 - 5.0% | Hoʻomaikaʻi i ka wai, castability and deoxidation of the melt. |
| Nickel (I) | 0 - 1.0% (i keʻano.) | Koho koho; can improve corrosion resistance, strength and toughness. |
| 'Eron (Lia) | ≤ ~0.5% (i keʻano.) | Controlled impurity or deliberate addition; affects strength and wear. |
Alakaʻi (Pb) |
≤ ~0.2–0.25% (piu) | May appear at trace levels in some castings; small amounts aid machinability but are not a defining element. |
| Silikino (A) | ≤ ~0.5% (piu) | Deoxidation/fluidity influence; normally controlled to low levels. |
| Phoshorus (P) | ≤ ~0.03% (piu) | Deoxidizer/degasser residue; kept very low to avoid embrittlement. |
| Sulfur (S) | ≤ ~0.02% (piu) | Poino; low levels tolerated; excessive S is detrimental. |
| Aluminum / Mang kāne / other | Each typically ≤ ~0.1–0.3% | Minor micro-alloying or tramp elements controlled to specification. |
4. Physical and mechanical properties
Below are representative as-cast values for C90300 drawn from typical supplier and material-data references.
Actual properties vary with casting process, PAUKU PAUKU, gating strategy and melting practice — always validate with cast coupons from your foundry.
Physical properties
| Waiwai | Waiwai maʻamau |
| Huakai | ≈ 8.7–8.9 g/cm³ (≈ 0.318 lb / in³). |
| Nā Sodia Solidus / Wai | ~854 °C (Nā Sodia Solidus) - ~1000 °C (wai) (guide to safe pouring and superheat). |
| Ka HōʻaʻO Kokua | ~70–75 W/m·K (depends on Sn/Zn content). |
| Mea kūʻai uila | ~10–12 % Iac (low compared with pure copper). |
| Ka maikaʻi o ka hoʻonuiʻana i ka | ≈ 17 × 10-° C (room to moderate temps). |
Nā Pīkuhi Propertinies (typical as-cast)
| Waiwai | Laulā maʻamau / value |
| Ikaika ikaika (Us) | ~300–320 MPa (≈ 44–46 ksi) |
| Hua (0.5% Kahiki) | ~145–152 MPa (≈ 21–22 ksi) |
| Ewangantion (i 50 mm) | ~18–30% depending on section and process |
| Paʻakikī paʻakikī (Bnn) | ~ 70 Hb (e like me ka hana maʻamau) |
| Modulus olasticity | ~110–125 GPa |
5. Casting behavior and foundry practice
Suitable casting processes
C90300 is adaptable to the major casting methods used for bronzes:
- Sand cread — economical for large or heavy sections.
- Kāhaka kūʻai kūʻai (nalowale-wax casting) — best surface finish and dimensional accuracy for thinner, nā'āpana kiko'ī.
- Nā wili lei and permanent-mold casting — intermediate options offering improved surface finish and tolerance.
- Continuous and centrifugal casting are also used for bars, rings and certain shapes.

Critical casting parameters
- Ka nininiʻana / wela nui: respect the alloy liquidus and avoid excessive superheat;
Concast data indicate liquidus near ~1000 °C and solidus near ~854 °C — control within a narrow window to balance fluidity and avoid oxidation/dross. - Melt maʻemaʻe: degassing and filtration are essential; tin bronzes are sensitive to hydrogen porosity and oxide inclusions — ceramic filters and rotary degassers reduce risks.
- Goting & hānai: design feeders to supply shrinkage in heavy sections and use gradual sectional transitions to avoid hot-spots and hot-tears.
Simulation (fill/solidification) is recommended for complex geometries. - Kāohi paʻa: directional solidification with chills or chills/risers helps reduce shrinkage defects and refines microstructure in thicker portions.
Post-singing wela wela
C90300 is not a precipitation-hardening alloy; it does not respond to solution-age heat treatments to raise strength.
Typical thermal steps are stress-relief anneals (to remove casting stresses and improve machinability) or moderate anneals to improve ductility where required.
Practical foundry practice relies on casting control — not heat treatment — for most mechanical property objectives.
6. Markinpalibility, hui pū & Ke hoʻopauʻana
Markinpalibility
- ʻO ka manikini uila — tin content enhances chip formation and machinability relative to many high-strength copper alloys;
common machinability rating values place C90300 in a practical class for routine turning, milling and drilling with carbide tooling. - Recommended practice: use rigid fixturing, mea hoʻoili lāʻau kaʻaʻula (coated grades for production), conservative feeds to avoid built-up edge, and light finishing passes for critical surfaces.
Sulfur and lead contents in other alloys (not C90300 lead-free variants) can alter chip control — verify composition before selecting cutting parameters.

Hui pū
- Mohaihala is the preferred joining method for bronze castings when required (filler metals and flux selected for bronze compatibility).
- Welding is generally avoided for large castings because bronze tends to suffer from thermal cracking and property changes; localized welding can be used with specialist procedures and post-weld stress relief where unavoidable.
Ke hoʻopauʻana
- ʻO ka hoʻopololei, Wehe (I, Alaika), lacquering or patination are commonly applied depending on functional or aesthetic requirements.
For bearing surfaces, honing or lapping produces the required surface texture for lubricant film formation.
(Select finishing and joining processes in consultation with the foundry to avoid galvanic compatibility issues and finish adhesion problems.)
7. Kuupuiawi, wear and tribological performance
- Ke kū'ē neiʻo Corrosionion: Tin bronzes such as C90300 exhibit excellent resistance in fresh and seawater environments and are commonly used for marine hardware and pump components.
Their tin content promotes a stable surface film and reduces susceptibility to certain localized corrosion mechanisms. - Tribology and bearing behavior: C90300 is valued for good conformability and embedability — under mixed or boundary lubrication it tends to accept small hard particles into the softer bronze matrix rather than scoring the harder shaft.
This makes it a favored material for bushings, plain bearings and sleeves running against hardened steel. Proper lubrication and surface finish are still necessary for long service life.
Kūlana Kūpono: for high-load rotating bearings consider tested bearing geometry, lubrication regime and possible use of lined or composite bearings if duty exceeds bronze’s capability.
8. Typical applications of UNS C90300 alloy
Common service areas where UNS C90300 is specified:
- Bussings, sleeves and plain bearings (hydraulic pumps, Nā Hāʻewa).
- Pump and valve components (hanakai, nā kino valve, noho mau noho) — especially in marine and water-handling equipment.
- Kauluhi, worm wheels and small structural castings where castability and wear resistance are needed.
- Marine fittings and propeller components where seawater corrosion resistance is required.
- Decorative castings and architectural elements where patina and aesthetics matter.
| Comparison factor | C90300 (Tin bronze) | C51000 (Phosphor Bronze) | C95400 (Aluminum bronze) | Alakaʻi i nā bronzes (E.g., C93200, Kamoihia) |
| Kūleʻa maʻamau (wt%) | Cu ≈ 86–89; Sn ≈ 7.5–9; Zn ≈ 3–5; minor Fe/Ni | Cu ≈ 90–95; Sn ≈ 5–10; P ≈ 0.01–0.35 (piu) | Cu ≈ 78–88; Al ≈ 5–11; Fe/Ni/C (Kahua liʻiliʻi) | Cu + Sn base with Pb additions ~1–4% (Nāʻokoʻa), small Zn/Sn |
| Primary strengthening mechanism | Solid solution & tin-rich phases from casting | Solid solution + phosphide dispersion (P) — good spring/fatigue | Solid solution + ordered phases; high strength via Al content | Solid solution; Pb acts as free-machining/soft phase for chip control |
| Typical as-cast UTS (Mpa) | ~300–320 MPa | ~350–500 MPa (varies with alloy & treatment) | ~400–650 MPa (ʻoi nui ka ikaika) | ~220–350 MPa (depends on Pb, Sn content) |
Typical hardness (HB) |
~70–140 HB (Ke hilinaʻi nei) | ~80–160 HB | ~120–220 HB (ʻoi aku ka kiʻekiʻe) | ~60–120 HB (softer due to Pb) |
| ʻAʻa & bearing performance | Good conformability & embedability; widely used for bushings | Excellent fatigue and spring performance; good bearing alloys available | Excellent wear and high-load bearing capability | Good lubricity/embeddability; excellent machinability for bearing inserts |
| Ke kū'ē neiʻo Corrosionion (Ke wai wai / wet env.) | Maikaʻi loa (marine service common) | Good to very good (depends on Sn) | Very good to excellent (aluminum bronzes outstanding in seawater) | Loli; leaded alloys can corrode in some environments; not preferred for seawater |
Whola (foundry behavior) |
Very good — sand, Shell, waiwai kūʻai | Maikaʻi loa; available as cast or wrought; phosphor bronze often wrought | Good to fair — higher pouring temp, picky on melt control | ʻO ka Castability maikaʻi loa; widely used for economical cast bearings/parts |
| Markinpalibility | Moderate — improved by Sn for chip control | Maikaʻi loa (phosphor bronzes can be challenging if hard) | Moderate to difficult — hard alloys wear tools | Kūpono (lead dramatically improves free-cutting behavior) |
| Heat treatability / hāwanaʻu | Not precipitation-hardenable; anneal/stress relief only | Some variants respond to cold work; not classic age-hardening | Some alloys can be heat treated for strength (solution/aging) | Not age-hardening; properties controlled by composition and working |
Nā noi maʻamau |
Bussings, Nā'āpana'āpana, Nā Vilves, ma haole featty, worm wheels | Kāhele, punawai, Nā'Āpana Pūnaewele, wear components | Nā hana kaumaha, ʻO nā mea alohaʻo Marine, high-load components, Kauluhi | Economical bushings, KahawaiOli, low-cost machined parts, nā wahi kiʻekiʻe |
| Kumukūʻai pili | Moderate — tin is a premium element | ʻOluʻolu-kiʻekiʻe (phosphor and high Sn increase cost) | ʻOi aku ka kiʻekiʻe (Albronzes and alloying raise cost) | Haʻahaʻa (leaded alloys are economical) |
| ʻO nā mea kūʻai aku kī / selection note | Balanced choice for wear + Kuupuiawi + whola | Choose when fatigue / spring performance or electrical properties matter | Choose for highest strength & severe wear / ka paleʻana i ka cavitation | Choose where machining cost dominates and corrosive service is not critical; restricted in potable/water use |
10. Hopena
UNS C90300 tin bronze is a manawa-ho'āʻo, high-value cast copper alloy that excels in balancing mechanical strength, E kāʻei i ke kū'ē, corrosion durability, a me ka pā.
Its carefully engineered chemical composition and uniform microstructure deliver consistent performance in moderate-load, low-to-medium speed service environments, making it indispensable in marine, flud dressling, mechanical power transmission, and general engineering sectors.
FaqS
What is the typical tin content in C90300?
Typical tin is ~7.5–9.0 wt% with copper as the balance; zinc is commonly present at ~3–5 wt%. Always check the mill certificate for the lot you receive.
Can C90300 be heat treated to increase strength?
No — C90300 is not a precipitation-hardening alloy.
Strength and ductility are primarily controlled through composition, section size and solidification rate; stress-relief anneals are used for dimensional stability.
Is UNS C90300 suitable for seawater service?
Yes — tin bronzes such as C90300 are routinely used in marine environments and pump components because of good seawater corrosion resistance and anti-fouling behavior relative to many steels.
What casting process should I specify?
Hoʻohana Kāhaka kūʻai kūʻai for thin, detailed parts and tight tolerances; sand or shell casting for larger or economy parts.
Specify desired surface finish, tolerance band and NDT requirements up front.


