stilettobob
Military
- Dec 31, 2002
- 2
I was approached by a friend with this question and thought this forum could help me out. "i make glass stuff in the kiln. the process is to fuse up different pieces
into a flat blank (multiple firings at 1500F) on a mullite or colloidal
silica board. the last firing is to shape it. for bowl shaped things, i
sometimes use found steel objects (kitchen bowls, woks, serving trays, etc).
glass starts moving around 1100, and fully forms the shapes at around
1200-1250F. the steel forms have a wash (alumina/kaolin clay mixture) to
prevent the glass from sticking. this wash is mixed with water and sprayed
or brushed on steel when it's around 300-400, so it will actually stick. the
steel is very smooth, as one doesn't want to impart a pattern on the glass
object.
we've found that the steel will spall, turn dark, and actually start to rust
at around 400F. when taken to 1200F or so, flakes of black metal will come
off the form, sometimes getting into the glass. sometimes we can create a
reduction atmosphere in the kiln by inserting something into it at temp to
catch fire and use the o2, but it's very hard in an electric kiln to create
an oxidizing atmosphere. i was wondering if there's any way to prevent this
rusting/spalling of the forms?"
into a flat blank (multiple firings at 1500F) on a mullite or colloidal
silica board. the last firing is to shape it. for bowl shaped things, i
sometimes use found steel objects (kitchen bowls, woks, serving trays, etc).
glass starts moving around 1100, and fully forms the shapes at around
1200-1250F. the steel forms have a wash (alumina/kaolin clay mixture) to
prevent the glass from sticking. this wash is mixed with water and sprayed
or brushed on steel when it's around 300-400, so it will actually stick. the
steel is very smooth, as one doesn't want to impart a pattern on the glass
object.
we've found that the steel will spall, turn dark, and actually start to rust
at around 400F. when taken to 1200F or so, flakes of black metal will come
off the form, sometimes getting into the glass. sometimes we can create a
reduction atmosphere in the kiln by inserting something into it at temp to
catch fire and use the o2, but it's very hard in an electric kiln to create
an oxidizing atmosphere. i was wondering if there's any way to prevent this
rusting/spalling of the forms?"