Friday, 9 September 2011
Scoring Glass
Holding the Cutter
Generally, you use the cutter by moving it away from you, so you can see the cartoon lines as you score. When using a straight edge such as a cork-backed ruler to guide your cutter, you can pull the cutter toward you, or push it away as suits you. The cutter should always be held at a 90 degree angle (left to right). You can determine this by looking down the cutter to the wheel and to the cartoon line below.
It is important that the work be done from the forearm rather than the fingers or the wrist. The forearm should be held closely to the body. This reduces the freedom of movement, giving clean flowing score lines. It also reduces the actions that can lead to repetitive stress injuries. Any turning required by tight curves can be done by turning the body from the hips or shuffling around the bench with the glass at a corner. Of course, for long cuts your arm will have to extend from you body in a parallel direction with the score line.
Scoring Pressure
The second and very important element in scoring glass is the amount of pressure used. Very little pressure is required. You should hear no more than a quiet hiss on transparent glass and almost no sound on opalescent glass. However some manufacturer's transparent glass has almost no sound either. So the important element is the pressure, not the sound. Most people start with applying far too much pressure. Tests have shown that only about 2 kg of pressure is required for a clean score.
You can test the effect of this amount of pressure on a bathroom scale. Place a piece of clear glass on the scale and without touching the glass with your other hand, score it noticing how much weight is being recorded. Keep trying until you are at the 2 kg area of pressure. Try breaking the glass. Score a curve with the original amount of pressure and break the glass. Then using the same curve score the glass with the 2 kg pressure and break the glass. You will see and feel the lesser pressure provides a clean break.
Excessive pressure leads to breaks showing significant stress marks on the edge of the glass. Too little pressure has no effect on the glass, making it impossible to break along the score line. The correct pressure (ca. 2 kg.) leads to almost vertical stresses being put into the glass which assists the breaking along the score line. Too heavy pressure creates stress marks which are at increasingly large angles with the increasing pressure. This will still break cleanly on straight lines, but when working around curves the glass can follow one of the lateral stress marks away from the score line. Excessive pressure is often the cause of glass breaking away from the score line on a curve, especially a tight one.
Monday, 5 September 2011
Foiling Nuggets
Wednesday, 31 August 2011
Glass Stuck to Moulds
- Is the glass trapping the mould? This happens most often when the glass is draped, especially over ceramic moulds.
- Has the glass been fired high enough to fuse to the mould? If you have fired the glass to tack fusing temperatures, you may find more occasions when the glass sticks slightly or firmly to the mould.
- Is the mould trapping the glass? This can happen when slumping into a steep sided steel mould. Occasionally a steep sided ceramic mould will show the same effect.
- Has the separator been too thin or failed? If none of the previous elements apply, it may be that the separator was too thin or has been fired to tack fusing temperatures in a previous firing.
Friday, 26 August 2011
Aperture Drops Finishing
After the piece has cooled and been removed from its ring,
you can consider how to finish the piece. The first decision is whether to retain or
remove the rim from the vessel. In some cases, the rim can be retained as an
integral part of the piece and there is little work needed to finish the
piece. Possibly only tidying up the edge of the rim and cleaning the
bottom.
Removing the rim
But for most aperture drops and for most people, it is
desirable to remove the rim. To have successful drops without rims, you most
often need to have access to cutting and polishing equipment. There are several ways to do this.
The method that uses least equipment is to score around the upside
down drop just above the rim. When
scored, tap the rim with a soft hammer to release it. This is not always an even break and
sometimes runs into the length of the drop.
A low tech way of cutting is to put a diamond cutting blade
on a Dremel-like battery powered tool and with a flow of water grind through
the side of the drop. It is best to have
a small flow of water directed at the cutting area, rather than immersing the
rim in a bath of water. This helps avoid
electrical shock.
The rim can be cut off in portions with a tile saw, cutting
quarters, eighths, sixteenths off the rim, approaching the edge of the drop. Those with adjustable height wet saws can cut
through small portions at a time of the rim, and support both the rim and the
drop, especially when nearing the completion of the cuts.
There are also specialised versions of the wet angle grinder
that make cutting of the rim easy and much more certain of a good result.
Finishing
After any of these methods of removing the rim, the drop edge,
and possibly bottom, needs to be ground and polished. Fire polishing is not possible as the drop
would collapse long before the rim was smooth.
Because the rim will be relatively thin, it is possible to grind and polish with hand pads. However, it is quicker to use a flat lap or linisher with a succession of finer grits to grind and polish an edge. HIS Glassworks has a series of videos and this one gives good information on the methods and progression of grits to get to a polished edge whether by machine or by hand.
Sunday, 21 August 2011
Aperture Drops Annealing
Tuesday, 16 August 2011
Aperture Drops - Stopping the Drop
Thursday, 11 August 2011
Aperture Drop Observation
This kind of firing absolutely requires observation of the progress of the drop. Ideally you would set up the firing surface where you can peek at it during the firing as well as observe the bottom of the kiln or the shelf – which ever you are firing upon.
I you have to choose, then the bottom of the kiln is the most important place to have clear observation lines. Even if you do not want the drop to touch the shelf or bottom of the kiln, you will need to observe how far the drop has progressed.
Thus, planing for the placing of the supports and other elements of the drop are important. Support posts should not obscure the view of the drop, for example. The whole set up should be placed far enough back in the kiln to see the shelf/kiln bottom where the glass will touch down.
If you do not want to have the drop touch down onto a surface, you need to set up a “witness” to indicate how far the glass has fallen. This can be some pieces of fibre stacked up so that your view through the peep hole to the top visible surface of the “witness” will tell you that when the glass touches that line of vision, it has reached the desired length.
You need to patient, as the soaks can be two or more hours long for a low temperature drop.
Saturday, 6 August 2011
Aperture Drop Placement
Wednesday, 3 August 2011
Grinder Head Grub Screw
Monday, 1 August 2011
Aperture Drops Firings
- one is to heat at a very slow but consistent rate. After the annealing point has been reached the speed can be increased.
- the second is to go a bit faster, but with soaks at three or more intervals in the heat up. After each soak the speed of advance can be increased a little. The soaks should be from 15 to 30 minutes, depending on the speed of heat up.
- aperture size
- weight of glass
- speed of advance to forming temperature
- glass used (to a lesser extent)