Good annealing is important to the success of each firing of a piece.
This is generally agreed.
I do not understand the reasoning of those who use long anneal soaks followed by quick cool rates and early shut offs. I don't understand because reasons are not given. Or the reasons are in the realm of kiln fairies and other mythical beings.
The length of the annealing soak can be determined from established sources. The Bullseye table for annealing thick slabs gives the recommended soak times for evenly thick slabs of glass from 6mm/0.25” to 200mm/8.0”. Use that to determine the annealing soak time.
The soak times do not need lengthening except for pieces of uneven thicknesses. The ebook Low Temperature Kilnforming gives the calculations for variations in thickness and degree of tack. Generally, they are 1.5 for contour; 2 for rounded tack; and 2.5 for sharp/angular tack. Excessively long soaks are not desirable. This is additional evidence that long soaks and quick cools create problems.
The Relationship Between Soak and Cool Rate
Use of the Bullseye table shows that there are cool rates associated with the soak times. These rates for the length of annealing soak need to be used, as they are based on research, rather than fingers in the air or mythical beings.
My experiments have shown the need to control the cooling rates to at least 50C before shutting off. The end of an adequate annealing soak has the glass within 5°C/10°F of each other part (the ΔT=5). The slow cool for the first 55°C/100°F below is important to avoid exceeding that maximum differential. The rate for the next 55°C/100°F is faster and can allow a wider ΔT, as the stresses are temporary. But they can be great enough at any point to break the glass during fast cools. Therefore, the rates associated with the annealing soaks cannot be exceeded safely.
Do not just use "what works" for others. Use information based on research. The only company publishing research is Bullseye. Their research is applicable to all fusing glass with the appropriate temperature adjustments.
If you use long annealing soaks and quick cool rates or ones that stop at about 370°C/700°F, you risk breakages of your glass. There is no reason to take that risk. Also long cools from annealing to 370°C take longer than the staged cooling recommended by the Bullseye research.
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