Dale, I've heard for years that Mr. Goehring has the very best castings. So I decided I should try, and I called a couple months ago and the man who answered said Mr. Goehring was not there. I said I was checking to see if he had some particular castings. His reply was "I doubt it" but he asked which ones. I gave him the numbers and he said someone would get back to me. I received a phone message from Mr. Goehring's daughter, who said she was taking over sales from her dad, they didn't have what I was looking for, and had no idea when they may be available. She sounded very pleasant, and it sounded like they were continuing the business, so hopefully they will keep it going.
My frustration here is that I am at best an advanced beginner builder, with no one within hundreds of miles with the slightest interest in this, the closest suppliers or longfile shows to actually look at parts in person are a 3000+ mile round trip, so I rely heavily on this wonderful place and the incredibly generous people here for advice on doing things the correct way. I read posts from those on this site whose work I greatly admire describe their builds as using "good soft yellow brass", as well as posts deriding the existence of the harder bronze castings as completely inappropriate, and I get the (surely mistaken) impression that only an uneducated noob would use them. Mr. Pierce says all the parts in my photo look good to him, which tells me color and texture of a rough casting are not indicative of quality.
I guess I didn't phrase my original question correctly. If soft yellow brass and the harder bronze are equally appropriate, depending upon the builder's intentions (similar maybe to red maple vs sugar), is there a way to make an informed decision if the part received is acceptable? For example, the triggerguard I got appears to have the correct form, but I'd like to bend it a bit closer to the stock between the bow and spur. Is the only way to tell if it won't anneal and bend without breaking or cracking (like Dave B's buttplate) is try it, and if it breaks, keep buying them until one doesn't?