Wednesday 18 September 2019

Fibre Dams



Fibre dams are a good and relatively inexpensive refractory material to form dams around regular and especially irregular shapes.  You need only cut the shape you want from the fibre board, if it is not a shape with straight lines.  

You can fire without any kiln wash or hardening if it is a one-off use.  For shapes you want to keep, you can harden the fibre board. 
Once hardened with colloidal silica, you need to paint the board with a separator – kiln wash, boron nitride or similar.

There are some precautions in the use of fibre paper and board.  The main physical one is that refractory fibre is lighter than glass and so will float on top of “molten” glass – that is fusing compatible glass higher than about 800°C.

Fibre board dams can be weighted with kiln furniture on the surface of the board.  If the board is flat this can be on the surface.  If the board is vertical, weights can be placed at the corners.

In the absence of fibre board, you can use layers of fibre paper.  If you have 6mm fibre paper, you need only one layer for two-layer glass, but remember that to get a bullnosed edge to the glass without needling, the fibre paper should be 3mm less than the final height of the fired piece. Thicker glass will require more than one layer of fibre paper.  Place as many layers of fibre paper as required to be at least equal in height to the finished piece on top of one another.  Push “U” shaped pins into the layers of paper to fasten the layers together.  Then cut the required shape out of all the layers all at one time. 

When finished cutting the shape out, you may want to line the edge with 1mm fibre paper to keep any of the layers of fibre paper showing through.  This dam will not need any kiln wash to prevent the glass sticking to it, unless you want multiple uses and so need to rigidise it with colloidal silica.

You can weight this fibre paper dam down by placing kiln furniture near the edge, all around the shape just as for the fibre board.

Safety in use of refractory fibre is described in Gregorie Glass.
Scroll down to Dusts/Particulates for safety recommendations.

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