I just took a glass piece out of the kiln after slumping it into the large organic mold. It's kind of 3 layers in that one piece is a flat coral design, the next layer is frit lace and the last layer is an irridized clear circle. All Bullseye glass. It slumped nicely using the following schedule:
250 - 1000 -15
100 -1175 - 23
AFAP - 900- 40
100 - 800 - 0
200 - 700 - 0
400 - 100 - off
I felt like this was a very conservative schedule so am very surprised to hear pinging. The coral piece was 11" in diameter and the lace and clear circle were approx. 10" dia.
I'm wondering if I can put it back in the kiln and refire up to 1000 F and then do a longer hold at 900F, perhaps for 60 min? That is provided it doesn't break before I get it in there again.
What do you think??
Pinging glass after slumping
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Re: Pinging glass after slumping
That schedule probably needed a longer anneal hold, at least an hour.
If the ping caused a visible break, then refiring to re-anneal won't heal the crack, you'd have to go higher. If there's no crack, re-firing and re-annealing should work.
If the ping caused a visible break, then refiring to re-anneal won't heal the crack, you'd have to go higher. If there's no crack, re-firing and re-annealing should work.
Re: Pinging glass after slumping
So, same schedule just longer hold?
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Re: Pinging glass after slumping
Yes, anneal hold at least 60 minutes, 75 wouldn't hurt. And I'd probably be extra cautious and go up a bit slower, say 200 dph (may be overkill, but why take chances?).
Piece looks nice.
Piece looks nice.
Re: Pinging glass after slumping
the big thing everybody overlooks is uneven thickness. You always have to allow more time than the thickest part. When there is a differential between the thicknesses you can thermal shock it.