

Moderators: Brad Walker, Tony Smith
go slow when you have non-flat glass. something like:Kitty wrote:ive been cleaning out old glass around here, stuff that wasnt suitable for the jewelry i make, and have made a bunch of smaller plates. the BE periwinkle opal had a slightly wavy texture, and i wondered if it would be a problem fusing. i decided it would be ok if i had a soak around 1235F so the top piece of thin BE would sort of settle down onto the wavy surface. well, i was wrong. you can see the air bubbles in the troughs between the "waves." how to get rid of them? i thought drilling pinholes might work, although it would be quite a few pinholes. the orange plate is 3mm periwinkle on the bottom, 1.5mm orange on top. i know it usually should be 2 sheets of 3mm, but this is an exercise in cleaning out old stuff, so i used one piece of 3mm and one piece of thin. the other picture is 2 pieces 4-1/2" square, periwinkle bottom, yellow top. had the same trapped air problem, but it's less noticeable on the smaller ones. i'm open to any ideas, including sawing them up for pattern bars. it's a lesson in learning to flatten sheets before fusing, i guess. they dont look square in these pictures, but they are. it's a cheesy little webcam. kitty.
Yo KittyKitty wrote:ive been cleaning out old glass around here, stuff that wasnt suitable for the jewelry i make, and have made a bunch of smaller plates. the BE periwinkle opal had a slightly wavy texture, and i wondered if it would be a problem fusing. i decided it would be ok if i had a soak around 1235F so the top piece of thin BE would sort of settle down onto the wavy surface. well, i was wrong. you can see the air bubbles in the troughs between the "waves." how to get rid of them? i thought drilling pinholes might work, although it would be quite a few pinholes. the orange plate is 3mm periwinkle on the bottom, 1.5mm orange on top. i know it usually should be 2 sheets of 3mm, but this is an exercise in cleaning out old stuff, so i used one piece of 3mm and one piece of thin. the other picture is 2 pieces 4-1/2" square, periwinkle bottom, yellow top. had the same trapped air problem, but it's less noticeable on the smaller ones. i'm open to any ideas, including sawing them up for pattern bars. it's a lesson in learning to flatten sheets before fusing, i guess. they dont look square in these pictures, but they are. it's a cheesy little webcam. kitty.
Lionel wrote:Secret tip number 1 - How to NOT trap bubbles between sheets.
1. Cut 1/4" strips of clear BE or your fusable.
2. Cut 1/4" squares from your 1/4" stips.
3. Place them all on fiber paper and melt at 1450 for 20 minutes
You should have little round dots - you can kill your kiln after the
melt because there is no annealing required.
4. Place the CLEANED round dots between the layers in each corner
1/2" in from all edges.
5. RA1=450 to 960 hold 60 for 2 layes
RA2=900 to 1450 hold for 30
RA3=1500 to 960 hold for 60
RA4=70 to50 hold for 60
If you hav an all IFB kiln - Kill Power
If you have a Fiber kiln - RA5=70/HR to 200 then off
This causes the middle to drop first and the corners last.
No chance to trap air.
All kilns run a little different - you will need to play with this - but it works.
I can't take credit for the word chads. (To me, chads are still the reason we ended up with "W."Lionel wrote:Thanks Jackie
I like the word "chads" - I never did know what to call those things.
If you put them at the very edge you run the risk of moving the edge out and distorting it. Lets split the diffferance and say 1/4".
Using the soak at 960 on the way up equalizes the kiln shelf and bricks. The kiln ramps faster to the higher set point and recovers to that temp faster when you crash it.
A 5 year old Paragon GL64 with original elements will ramp slower than a new kiln. It's kind of like running a 64 Olds in the winter. You'll get there but it will take a while.
After a year of devit problems - I've found that the less time in the 1000 range is best. I agree with adding soaks above 1200. I don't do it because my kiln is slower than most.
I guess my last line about "playing" with it was'nt strong enough. There is as much to learn from mistakes as successes. I have a log book I use with a photo of all my %&(* up's and I'm on page 337. If this board was around 15 years ago it would be below a 100 I guess.
I never take personal offence from good information and your caution flag to other is waranted. It's easy to assume that everyone who reads this stuff is on the same page. This problem was on page 91.