Sometimes in fusing, the base layer can exhibit a crack or
break without the upper layers being affected.
This kind of break almost always occurs on the heat up. In a tack fuse, the top layers may still be
horizontal and unaffected by the break beneath them. If a full fuse, the upper layers will slump
into the gap, or apparently seal a crack that is apparent on either side.
An example of tack fused elements on top of a previously fused base |
Causes
This is more likely to be seen where there is a large
difference between thicknesses. If the
base is a single or double layer and there are several layers of glass –
especially opalescent – on top, there is a greater chance for this kind of
break to occur.
The
reason for this kind of break is that the upper layers insulate the part of the
lower layers they are resting upon.
Glass is an insulator, and so a poor conductor of heat. This means that the glass under the stack is
cooler than the part(s) not covered. A
break occurs when the stress of this temperature differential is too great to
be contained.
An example of stacked glass in a tack fusing |
This
kind of break can also occur when there are strongly contrasting colours or
glasses that absorb the heat of fusing at different rates. One case would be where the dark lower
layer(s) were insulated by a stack of white or pale opalescent glass. The opalescent glass will absorb the heat
more slowly than the dark base. This
increases the risk of too great a temperature differential in the base.
Reducing the risk of these breaks.
Even thicknesses
One
way to reduce the risk of base layer breaks is to keep the glass nearly the
same thickness over the whole of the piece.
Sometimes this will not give you the effect you wish to obtain.
Slow the firing rate
Another
way is to slow down the temperature rise.
Some would add in soaks at intervals to allow the glass under the stack
to catch up in temperature. As we know
from annealing, glass performs best when the temperature changes are gradual
and steady. Rapid or even moderate rates
of advance with soaks, do not provide the steady input of heat.
This
prompts the question of how fast the rate of advance should be, and to what
temperature.
Rate of advance
The
rate of advance needs to take account of the thickness differential and the
total thickness together. A safe, but
conservative, approach is to add the difference in thickness between the
thinner and the thickest parts of the piece to the thickest. Then program a rate of advance to
accommodate that thickness. E.g., a 6mm
base with a 9mm stack has a total height of 15mm. The difference is 9mm which added to 15mm
means you want a rate of advance that will accommodate a 24mm piece.
The rate of advance can be estimated from the final annealing cool rate required for that
thickness. In the example above, the rate would be about 100°C per hour. The more layers there are, the
more you need to slow the heat up of the glass. The Bullseye table for Annealing Thick Slabs is the most useful guide here.
Firing already fused elements
If
you were adding an already full fused piece of 9mm thick to a 6mm base, you
could have a slightly more rapid heat up, bu not by a lot. This is because
the heat will be transmitted more quickly through a single solid piece to the
base glass. It is safer to maintain the initial calculation. If your stack is tack fused,
this will not apply, as the heat will move more slowly through the layers of
the tack fusing much the same way as independent layers on the initial firing.
Conclusion
The general point is that you need to dramatically slow the speed of firing when you have stacked elements on a relatively thin base. Even a two layer base can exhibit this kind of break when there is a lot of glass stacked on it.
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