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🖤 Elevate Your Metal Game with Birchwood Casey's Fast-Acting Finish!
Brass Black Metal Finish 3 oz.- Fast-acting liquid used by gunsmiths and industry to blacken or antique brass, copper and bronze parts. Easy to apply with no dimensional change. Often used to mark cartridge cases to identify loads. Excellent for blackening name plates, plaques, castings, sculptures and other home, workshop and hobby uses. Color varies depending on alloy and can be highlighted if desired. Review: Buy it. I promise it’s worth it! - Works great for brass coins. Here’s my steps for use: Soak brass until completely black Wipe excess off with paper towel Hit high spots with 0000 Steel wool Hit high spots again with dremel felt polisher Review: Perfect product - Worked great!!























| ASIN | B0000C514O |
| Best Sellers Rank | #20,507 in Sports & Outdoors ( See Top 100 in Sports & Outdoors ) #40 in Gunsmithing Tools |
| Brand Name | Birchwood Casey |
| Customer Reviews | 4.6 4.6 out of 5 stars (1,394) |
| Global Trade Identification Number | 00029057152258 |
| Included Components | see descritption |
| Item Type Name | gun-cleaning-kits |
| Item Weight | 0.2 Pounds |
| Manufacturer | Birchwood Casey |
| Model Number | BC-152 |
| Part Number | BC-15225 |
| UPC | 029057152258 |
| Unit Count | 1.0 Count |
M**S
Buy it. I promise it’s worth it!
Works great for brass coins. Here’s my steps for use: Soak brass until completely black Wipe excess off with paper towel Hit high spots with 0000 Steel wool Hit high spots again with dremel felt polisher
K**A
Perfect product
Worked great!!
R**N
Excellent black solution
Works just fine on copper and has a nice dark black finish to it. The finish is slightly fragile on plain copper itself so if this is an area of heavy wear you might want to go for multiple coats but my primary use for this is aging and highlighting engravings so it's overall perfect for what I need. I say fragile but even with repeated go-overs with steel wool (for contrast) it will still leave an obvious dark finish, so it's penetrating pretty well Very, very reactive and will blacken in a couple moments. This is not a gradual aging like you get from some products where it takes an hour or two to get the full effect. Like with any bluing/blacking solution surface prep is absolutely critical, so if you're running into finish problems then make sure of how you're prepping your piece. Oils will interfere with the process so a good rubdown with acetone or some kind of alcohol will take care of that. Even surface finish will lead to a consistent black.
S**N
Great product, if you follow the instructions
We moved to a house with a lot of well-worn oiled bronze fixtures. I didnt want to spray them or replace them, so I spend a while searching for an alternative. This product came up. I gave it a go and the results are great. I was able to bring the worn sections up to the level of the original sections of most of the bronze. The photos I attached show one coat. One caveat and two issues - You have to clean and use the steel wool for good results. Dont skip the steel wool. - Ive not had fantastic success with it in sinks stoppers. It does darken but its not been super effective. Constant water does seem to affect it. - It seems sometimes it takes a lot of coats to darken. It seems to be on faucets, but Ive not figured out why yet.
C**R
Worked great on the brass for the Hawkens I'm building
I'm building a Hawkens flintlock rifle. The brass in the kit is just too shiny for my liking. I watched a video on building this kit, and he used this on his. I thought I'd give it a try, and am quite glad I did. I started by scuffing the brass lightly with a 320 grit sandpaper, then painted on the Brass Black. I let it sit for a couple of minutes until it dried, then rinsed it under cold water, then dried it with a paper towel. After that, I took a piece of ScotchBrite and soaked it, then lightly buffed the brass with the damp pad. That took a lot of the black off, but then I repeated the process for a second coat. After the second coat, I was pretty satisfied with the results. Oh yeah, it also takes very little. I pour just enough into the bottom of a plastic cup to get a q-tip wet. I don't think it would be a good idea to dip the q-tip back into the bottle once you've started painting the brass with it. It looks to me like it would contaminate the rest. That may not be so, but why risk it. It's an easy process, and I really like the results. I would recommend it to anyone trying to antique their brass hardware.
J**N
Works well on almost all metals that I tried it on.
Works very well on almost all metals aside from Zinc. I wish the bottle was a little larger. About twice the size would be good.
P**L
Fantastic Oiled Bronze color on my door knob
I used this as an experiment on an old solid brass round door knob that had been scratched and old looking for 20 years. I had to remove the last scraps of lacquer first, and then followed the directions and immersed the knob. It turned the color I was hoping, the gorgeous oiled bronze look which is what I was going for, and why I give the product 5 stars. Unfortunately some of the dark coloring has rubbed off in odd, patchy spots on the edge of the round knob, but I really can't say if it was my fault for rushing through the process or the products fault, or perhaps brass that is not evenly mixed. I have more knobs and other solid brass items, so will experiment with them and see if there is a better process and update this as I learn more. By the way, I also bought the oil rubbed bronze spray paint (metallic) and sprayed another brass knob, the kind with the handle to the side instead of round. It is under some use on a bedroom door and has held up really well, and looks fine, but no where near the patina this gives. Despite that, I will likely paint the majority of my knobs because it seems silly to replace them to update my house look when I can easily paint them, thus saving more stuff to be dumped in the dump and environment. I will use this product on my front door knob and plate as I like this look better, but cleaning off the lacquer was more arduous than I liked, as I tried rubbing alcohol (worked on one know, not the other), mineral spirits ( worked on the other knob) and lacquer thinner (helped but did not work well). Apparently finishes have changed over the years and trying to figure out what to use to remove the stuff as well as the actual scrubbing is a bit more energy than I want to do for EACH knob, thus the paint on knobs that are not easily seen. If any one has any ideas on how to make that removal easier, I would love to hear about it.
A**.
I compare my need for this product to someone giving themselves a bad hair colour job, where after they've made the mistake and have horrible yellow hair, they are trying desperately to find a way to bring it back to its original colour! In my case, I have an old brass door knocker that can be dated loosely between 1945-1975 (LOL). I'm in the process of updating my front entrance door and thought, hey after 25 years maybe there's something nice under this black stuff. I send a picture to my brother and he said, it could be brass. Without thinking, I took my SOS pad and in seconds was able to remove the black to reveal brass thinking I found treasure (and sent him the photo of it partially sanded and then... about 30 seconds later I was like... "OMG, now I've done it! I really want it blackened! What am I going to do?!" So to the internet and Amazon I went so fix my mess. I figured someone must have discovered a way to do it by now and someone did! Birchwood Casey. This product worked like a charm! I actual found it is more commonly used on guns (gasp), but that it can work on any brass metal object. Here's how I did it. - I first wiped down the knocker with acetone to remove any residue. - I then soaked cotton pads, wiped the surface with Brass Black let sit for about 2 minutes and continued to applied several applications, while letting in dry in between each one. - I let the whole thing dry for about 5 more minutes then washed under water. A tiny bit of black came off but nothing notable. - I held it up on my door to take a photo and show you how well it worked! Take a look at the photos! It's actually funny how I have a picture of each stage as I was so excited, full or regret, then excited again. If you have questions, be sure to ask a question vs. comment as Amazon doesn't send me messages when comments are left.
A**R
Have used on clean brass. Gives good pitch black if the surface is cleaned nicely. After some months it was not giving good black. But patches. Especially in monsoon so moisture and dust if avoided, it works great
E**N
Works after several applications.
L**S
Le produit fonctionne parfaitement. Resultat rapide, noirci uniformément Très bon achat bravo!! Bien emballé, arrivée à temps et en parfait état.
A**R
We’re good for what I wanted it to do
Trustpilot
2 weeks ago
2 months ago