Carbon Deposit Removal Help Needed
Moderators: Brad Walker, Tony Smith
Carbon Deposit Removal Help Needed
Can anybody help me with carbon removal? There must be a product out there or technique to remove the carbon deposit left by a blow pipe. I've tried tumbling but because of the concave depression it didn't work. Does anybody know anything about the gray carbon deposit left behind - in warm glass slumping besides color how does the carbon affect the glass?
SunToys
-
Tony Smith
- Posts: 1037
- Joined: Sun Mar 09, 2003 5:59 pm
- Location: Massachusetts, USA
- Contact:
consider sandblasting the carbon off. At fusing temperatures, the carbon burns off completely... it may be burned off at slumping temperatures as well (~1200°) but I'm not sure of that.
Tony
Tony
The tightrope between being strange and being creative is too narrow to walk without occasionally landing on both sides..." Scott Berkun
-
Cynthia
from my understanding from Tony's post is that carbon disipates?
Not necessarily... I am not sure what the physics are here...but when using a crucible in a firebucket, I got these lovely striations of carbon in the glass I poured. The glass was melted in a clay crucible, and the glass was filthy. I left it all cruddy to see what would happen...and I liked the result plenty. I did several batches...with and without crud. The dirty glass always ended up with these carbon stain striations (maybe it isn't carbon...but I think it is)...cleaned glass was clean. I believe it doesn't fire off because it's actually been incorporated into the body of the glass before it can burn off.
In fusing, if it's a surface discoloration, it can be blasted or ground off then fired back up to smooth...but if your stain is encapsulated...it's there for good. Or so this is my experience.