Has anyone tried to use milled graphite as a mold? Can graphite withstand repeated use and 1500F firings?
I would like to make calibrated pieces for jewlery and am not sure which would be the best approach in doing so.
Thanks, Sonje
Milled Graphite as a Mold?
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Re: Milled Graphite as a Mold?
No. It works fine the first few times, then starts to break down and you end up with a powdery mess.Sonje wrote:Can graphite withstand repeated use and 1500F firings?
Graphite is best when you touch the glass briefly at high temps, it doesn't work well when it remains at high temp for longer periods of time.
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Sonje
I would look in to mold mix 6 by Zircar. I'm not sure where you buy it but I do know that it costs less from the glass distributor that sells it than directly from Zircar. For small molds it works well. For larger molds other materials might work better.
I would look in to mold mix 6 by Zircar. I'm not sure where you buy it but I do know that it costs less from the glass distributor that sells it than directly from Zircar. For small molds it works well. For larger molds other materials might work better.
Bert
Bert Weiss Art Glass*
http://www.customartglass.com
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Bert Weiss Art Glass*
http://www.customartglass.com
Furniture Lighting Sculpture Tableware
Architectural Commissions
I have seen wonderfull results from HOT CASTING into graphite, then popping the piece, then annealing. I was told by a MFG at GAS, that Graphite starts to break down around 1100degF. It looses cohesion.
If you had a pot/furnace, gather a punty, drop the glass into the graphite, cut it off, torch the tail, flip the mold, anneal the piece. You could do hundreds in a day. The MFG recommended 2-3 molds in rotation.
It provide a very bright clean surface. A wonderfull material if you can work with it's limitations.
Greg
If you had a pot/furnace, gather a punty, drop the glass into the graphite, cut it off, torch the tail, flip the mold, anneal the piece. You could do hundreds in a day. The MFG recommended 2-3 molds in rotation.
It provide a very bright clean surface. A wonderfull material if you can work with it's limitations.
Greg