Haven't used it myself, just watched AC guy braze copper fittings together yesterday. Filler looks like a light copper, so ought to look good on iron hardware that might have been copper brazed originally. But this stuff melts some 500F or so lower than does pure copper metal. High phosphorus, when used on copper needs no flux. That was the first time I have seen fluxless torch brazing.
However, for use with brass or iron/steel one must use a braze flux, such as Harris Products "Stayfil"
This copper-colored filler is nominal 87.9% copper, 6.1% phosphorus (the deoxidizer when brazing copper) and 6% silver. AWS spec is BCu-P-3. Solidus 1190F (where it just gets slushy) and liquidus 1465F (where it is completely liquid. Actual braze temperature should, I believe, be somewhere above 1465F. Recommended joint clearance 0.003 to 0.006". I watched the guy torch braze, nothing seemed to glow. The only scary part was he had no protective goggles on. What the heck, he had two of 'em . . . I did politely mention eyeball stuff when he was finished.
Anyway, it is a so-called "silver solder" that almost matches copper's color. If anyone cares. Look under
www.harrisproductsgroup.com, assorted video at
www.infernobyharris.com