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Most modern chassis are Zamak, which is mostly zinc with a little aluminum. Brass is copper with a bit of zinc. The base material ends up being twice the cost, and while it can be diecast, its less common. So finding someone who can and will would probably drive the cost up. Brass also corrodes more than zinc. Brass does machine very nicely, so for a smaller run it might be easier to machine it.
Tungsten is hard to machine. Its hard and abrasive and wears through tooling quickly. It also needs to be preheated before machining. No model train manufacturer is going to bother doing that. It's also expensive. Zinc is about a dollar a pound, copper three. Tungsten is $15 per pound for just the material.
I wonder if that is more dense than 100% lead. Powders tungsten is not, but being pressed might make it win, but by how much?
Depleted uranium is not going to have a market price, it is highly regulated. You are not going to be able to buy it legally.
The Railwire is not your personal army.