
Clear, unblasted, firepolished

Clear, blasted with Silicon Carbide, firepolished

Black, blasted with 120 grit Aluminum Oxide, firepolished
For more photos, go to: http://www.clearwaterglass.com/SandblasterTest.htm
Steve
Moderators: Brad Walker, Tony Smith
The AO test (#3 ?can't remember) was on black and the SI test #1 was on clear. I wouldn't expect the blasting to be as photographic on black as on clear. Are image #1 and image #7 equivalent maybe? Those were the only two tests I saw that compared AO to SI on clear glass after firepolishing. The AO one states it was firepolished to 1450F....thats firepolishing? Seems like fusing to me. Was the SI one at the top firepolished to 1450F too? I'm tired and pissed at my job and not thinking very clearly so maybe I should revisit it tomorrow.Tony Smith wrote:Wow!... that makes it really clear... doesn't it?
To summarize, the silicon carbide may be faster and last longer, but for fusing, the duller, cheaper abrasive gives better results (and more shocks).
Thanks for posting these photos Steve.
Tony
Hi Ron and Steve,Ron Coleman wrote:Interesting pictures Steve and good investigating too. Thanks to Nikki and Tony too.
Looks like the silicon carbide grit is blasting deeper holes in the glass that seal over with firepolishing trapping air. Ron
Don, I wouldn't venture so far as to say that. I think that since the depth of the crater is very small, it is insignificant relative to the thickness of the glass, and therefore shouldn't degrade the strength of the glass by any measurable amount. I have no evidence to prove that, but that would be my hypothesis.db wrote:Aside from the fusing appearance issues (which affect fusers more than me; a luke-warm glasser), are you-all speculating that blasting with SI weakens the glass in general and would be best avoided altogether?
Phil,Phil Hoppes wrote:Having my blast chamber already filled with SiC 120 as I like to carve I would be interested if there is any difference related to the pressure of the blast. I could blast up some samples of black, clear and clear on black that were blasted at different pressures. I was wondering if you blasted SiC at a lower pressure (I currently use 40) if the lower pressure might not give you a similar finish that the AlO3 does?
Also, what if you firepolish before you fuse? I do just few enough pieces of irid on irid that I would do the extra step if it means I don't have to reload my blaster. That's a test I can do but I would be interested if someone has already done it.
phil