The development and formation of soldering technique on the bronze ritual vessel casting of the Shang and Zhou Dynasties

This paper concerns the development of soldering in early China. Soldering requires the use of an additional heating of metal to join two or more existing metal items together. The paper defines the different soft and hard soldering materials. It also describes the evolution from joining two pieces,...

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Veröffentlicht in:Chinese archaeology (New York, N.Y.) N.Y.), 2018-11, Vol.18 (1), p.180-191
1. Verfasser: Zhang, Changping
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description This paper concerns the development of soldering in early China. Soldering requires the use of an additional heating of metal to join two or more existing metal items together. The paper defines the different soft and hard soldering materials. It also describes the evolution from joining two pieces, an animal head and a vessel with additional pour of bronze as an extension of the casting process. The next step was the use of hard solder, using bronze or copper related materials. There were two ways to join the existing bronze sections: the most common was “tenon soldering”. Less common but equally significant was “injection soldering”. In the late Spring-and-Autumn Period, soft soldering with tin and lead was developed. This step allowed much more extravagant decoration of bronzes, leading to new bronze vessel styles and also to much greater sub-division of labor in the production process.
doi_str_mv 10.1515/char-2018-0018
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source De Gruyter journals
subjects Ancient civilizations
Archaeology
Bronze
Bronze founding--China
Metallurgy
metalwork and metalworking
Rites & ceremonies
ritual vessels--Shang and Zhou Dynasties (16th cent. to 221 BCE)
solder and soldering--history
technical traditions
title The development and formation of soldering technique on the bronze ritual vessel casting of the Shang and Zhou Dynasties
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