|
Two pyramidical moulds. One stepped and the other smooth. |
This kind of draping mould with flat sides will never work very well as a draping mould. The draping sides have to compress. This
takes a long time and is likely to cause folds in the glass.
The common experience is that two opposite sides drape first and conform
to the mould. This displaces the compression necessity to the other two sides.
This "taco" style initial drape is common in all drapes. It is
usually observed in handkerchief drapes.
In the early stage of draping two sides of the glass fall, creating a
taco shape. With continued heating, those long sides fall and spread the
initial draped sides to become almost equal.
This taco formation also occurs on the pyramid style mould, giving two
flat sides. The glass on the other sides
then fall. As the glass area is now larger on these sides than the mould area,
a drape or fold is formed. Imagine the
drapes a square piece of cloth place on a pyramid would create. The cloth has
more area than the sides of the pyramid.
The excess cloth creates folds at each corner. The same happens with the glass.
This draping fold can be minimised by using low temperatures and long
(multiples of hours) soaks. This allows
all the sides of the glass to begin forming at more or less the same time. I am not sure the folds can ever be
completely eliminated. With extremely
long soaks, the drapes will flatten to the rest of the glass.
Annealing difficulties are caused by this folding. It will create thick overlaps. This in turn will cause the annealing
difficulties. There are areas that are much thicker than others. If you started with 6mm glass, the folds will
create areas that are 18mm thick.
Making sure this glass - with such large differences - is all of the
same temperature will require long annealing soaks. It will also require very slow cooling segments.
Square drape moulds are rarely successful. Folds are created at the
corners, rather than fully conforming to the mould.
No comments:
Post a Comment