Wednesday, May 26, 2010

Shaping Flat Glass


Glass expert describes the condition of the edges of windows, mirrors and other flat glass pieces. Almost all flat glass pieces are shaped from larger pieces using glass scribe and break techniques. Thus the edge of the part has two distinct sides. The photograph above is a microscopic picture of a the edge of an automobile mirror that was shaped in automatic scribing machinery. The top of the photomicrograph is the surface where the scribing tool has created controlled glass damage (i.e. crush). In general the damage is uniform. This photo imcorporates the start of the glass scribing, and this point always has more significant damage. Glass failure analysis determined that glass cracking due to thermal stresses initiated at the start point. Glass fracture analysis indicates that glass cracking always starts at the weakest point under tensile stresses.

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