| WROUGHTIRON | Tungsten or tin shaped round crude metal |
| METAL | Tungsten or tin, eg (5) |
| LEWD | Flew directly round - crude (4) |
| NOTHROUGHROAD | Get on to hard ground, round crude notice at side of track |
| PIGIRON | Crude metal with crude definition of copper to decrease? (3,4) |
| MALLET | Crude metal left inside hammer (6) |
| THEOREM | Maths formula put crude metal in them (7) |
| ASHORE | Tree and crude metal on dry land (6) |
| ORE | Crude metal |
| OPENER | The first in a series of events or games; a player who starts the betting or makes the first bid; or, a utensil for de-lidding a bottle or tin (6) |
| TOY | An old word for amorous sport/ play, frivolous entertainment, an antic or a trick; a trifling object or plaything, such as a doll, miniature, model, teddy bear or tin soldier; or, something diminutive |
| ORES | Crude metals |
| INKPAD | A wad of pigment- or sepia-soaked cloth within a shallow box or tin, for rubber-stamping or fingerprinting (6) |
| PATTYPAN | Central to a Beatrix Potter tale, a dish or tin in which to bake a little pie or cake; or, a miniature scalloped cymling squash, resembling this (8) |
| CRUSHER | Device for compressing, pulverising or squashing fruit, ice, rocks or tin cans; or, slang for a police officer (7) |
| BASEMETAL | Copper, lead, zinc or tin, as opposed to gold, silver or platinum |
| OPENERS | Paperknives; utensils for unlidding glass bottles or tin cans; bridge players who make the first bids in auctions; or, remarks used to initiate conversations (7) |
| WARE | Ending with iron or tin |
| ALLEY | Gasoline or Tin Pan |
| DECANTER | Bottle or tin kept in check (8) |