The brass is softer than copper actually, and as it is worked, it becomes softer, not harder. It does not have the weight all out on the end of the piece, like the copper boppers do. I don't use it much. I could have just as easily reached down and picked up a hammerstone that was able to reach the platform. The main use for the brass billet, is out in the woods collecting. It allows me to take the heavily cracked small float pieces apart better than just about anything else I have tried, and it fits in my back pocket.
I bought the pipe caps to make a couple of copper boppers, but have never stopped long enough to do so.
The weather has gone to crud again, so I am working inside. I already learned better than to try and do percussion work inside. After the initial reduction, I am not going back to percussion because of that, although I may use indirect during the pressure stage. I am attempting to do the whole thing by pressure alone, using the long flaker. On obsidian, I can lay the long flaking tool across my lap, use my left leg as a table top to support my hand, and pop flakes off that will wrap the other edge. I still can't seem to get them to run very well on this material at all without percussion or indirect.
I have a hip that is bone on bone, so the between the knees posture is not an easy one for me, but I am working on learning it. I still can't pop off the flakes I can across my lap bending the stick heavily, but I can power on through some things that I had problems with the other way. Across the lap just lets me use the long flaker better, at least so far for me. I don't get the same "crack" when the flakes pop loose the other way.
I have tried pushing the flakes off, and the various angles involved. I can push most flakes this way with little effort, simply setting the tip on the platform, and pushing it until the flake separates, straight down the axis of the tool, and I can approach the same power I get on my lap, but not the snap the bent stick gives. When I do that, I hold the piece against the inside of my thigh in my hand, with the stick tucked under my arm, and my hand on the stick about six inches back.
I am most definitely learning!
I am working the same problem today. I took a flake with a central ridge, fluted it up the ridge about 2 inches where it feathered out rather than hinged. I then started working it. This is raw, but I am having some success. I am getting up to almost inch flakes, standing it on edge, loading pressure onto it until the stick is bent pretty good, and then slowly rolling my hand until the flake pops loose, with the bent stick driving it. I was taking the flakes very close together.
Anyway, the flake size I am removing is a lot larger than it was. This one will still be in the bird point class when I get done. I need to thin a lot more early I guess.