This is why I asked. A true carbide part would seem excessively complex and expensive to make. A lot of labor, furnaces and shaping. Doesn't make sense to make the part from anything but bar stock of some steel alloy.If they are sold as carbide...it's solid carbide. If they are steel bushings...they are either polished tool steel or coated with TiN(titanium nitride)
They were solid carbide, molded or sintered? I don't really know. They were expensive to manufacture and lap to size. I made the mistake of having too many sizes for 4 different calibers. I had them for 22, 6mm, 6.5, and 30 cal. You multiply that times 9 diameters for each caliber and a minimum of 20 per each and I had quite an investment.All the carbide bushings I ever bought came from solid carbide (pressed, formed, sintered, etc…into solid material/stock). I assume they started as bar stock and were finished into bushings. @butchlambert used to have them made and supplied them years ago. Maybe he can elaborate on how exactly they were made.
I payed 2x plus that for my carbideThey were solid carbide, molded or sintered? I don't really know. They were expensive to manufacture and lap to size. I made the mistake of having too many sizes for 4 different calibers. I had them for 22, 6mm, 6.5, and 30 cal. You multiply that times 9 diameters for each caliber and a minimum of 20 per each and I had quite an investment.
Carbide Redding bushings? You may want to check that. Titanium nitrated maybe.Found Redding carbide bushings and buttons for two bucks each at a gun show. Bought em all