Rev. ... 2002-11-14, 2003-03-01, 05-05, 2004-02-18, -07-01, 2005-09-18, -10-01, 2006-05-30
FURNACES Started 8/25/96 with moves from
RECIPES
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There are two basic kinds of furnaces for melting glass: Pot and Tank. In the modern art glass studio, the pot furnace is much more likely, while a tank furnace is more likely in a production studio, classroom studio or commercial production facility.
In an pot furnace there is a pre-cast, pre-fired ceramic holder - the pot - for the glass that can (usually) be added and removed. In a tank furnace, the container for the glass is built of bricks fitted together. Tank furnaces are a choice if a large enough amount of glass is to be melted, but it has consequences as noted in the messages below. In the good old factory days a pot might be 3-4 feet wide and high and were made in the glass factory, although most used today are rarely larger than 2 feet. The former will hold a ton or two while the latter would be closer to 625 pounds and studios melting 130-225 pounds are more common. Glass held in the furnace too long starts to decompose, forming cords, etc., so overbuilding is not useful, besides taking more fuel to run. Most studios melt enough glass to use most of it in a week or less, recharging with batch or cullet weekly, twice a week or every night.
A small tank furnace can be built of brick-like slabs that are cut to size, so that there is a floor piece and four walls, but once beyond a certain size, it is built of side-by-side bricks. A tank furnace can not be well insulated because it keeps the glass inside the cracks by freezing it as it leaks out. One special form of tank furnace is the continuous feed. Here a barrier is installed part way across the tank with spaces underneath. Batch is added beyond the barrier and melted at a high temperature. The weight of the added batch forces the melted glass down under the barrier to the fore chamber which is kept at a lower working temp and the glass is fined partly by the action of being forced under the barrier. Glass is continuously used from the front and added to the back. 2004-07-01
Pots purchased for furnaces typically are rather fragile. This is because of the tradeoffs made so the pot sheds relatively little of its material into the glass during the months it is running. The material in commercial pots will crack if heated (or cooled) too fast. A typical pot has a recommended heating rate of 70°F per hour (one brand claims 300°F per hour) which means taking about 30 hours to get up to heat (2100/70=30) which absolutely requires a control system (more expensive) and means the furnace must be built for continuous operation (not daily or weekend manual runs.) Note that there is a bit of a Catch 22 here: The pot being fragile requires a long time to heat up and cool down, but the pot is fragile because of materials that will withstand being heated with glass in it for a long time - the exit being that cooking a large amount of glass requires a long time (overnight at least) and is corrosive, so the time to get started is relatively long no matter what.
Within the modern pot furnace environment, there are two
choices: free-standing and invested. The choice is built on the
fact that eventually the pot is going to crack and most
glassblowers don't yank the pot when the first cracks appear at
the rim, but wait until it is seriously gone because of the
purchase and shipping costs of a pot. [Good procedure is to have a spare pot on
hand.]
In a free standing furnace, the pot is normally
perched on a block a few inches up from a sloping floor. The sloping floor
drains the hot glass to an exit, usually stuffed with frax which is removed and
the glass drained into a box of sand or container of water. Then the furnace is
opened, a new pot installed and heated up. With a proper design, preheated pot,
etc., it is possible to change pots without going all the way cold - say at
800-900F. This was commonly done in old factories, less commonly in modern
studios.
In an invested pot furnace, the pot is surrounded with insulating
castable refractory, so that when it cracks, the investment will
hold the pot together, letting relatively little glass escape.
The down side is that the better the investment insulates the
further the molten glass can eat into the investment and the more
crud and insulation chunks will be dragged back into the glass as
the level lowers. If blowers would, as soon as a full crack
appears, empty the pot of glass and shut down, the drain back
defect would be moot, but most people investing want to avoid
rebuilding the furnace and want to keep blowing for another week
or month. Note that investment does require rebuilding at least
the lower part of the furnace - by the time failure has occurred,
the pot is glued with glass into the investment and getting the
pot, even in pieces, out to put a new pot in the same hole is
unlikely (some people put a smaller pot inside the old one.) It is
commonly felt at this time that invested pot furnaces are a poor choice in the
long run and free-standing is a better choice because of lower operating costs.
A design for a furnace should include a method of taking the crown
(top) off and/or removing a section of the side to permit removal of the pot.
The crown may weigh 200 or more pounds. Any furnace should include a flue,
which it has been suggested on a board should be 20 sq inches for 250KBtu up to
8x8 (64 sq.in.) reduced with a damper. The flue should exit high enough to
not be blocked by glass from a broken pot. Glass should flow to a opening
that is blocked by a wad of frax blanket that is pulled for draining.
Tank furnaces are built of rather expensive large flat bricks. At the higher price and quality levels, these are be priced at $25-30 and up each and a dozen or more may be required for the liner, with additional blocks not costing quite so much, because they are not in contact with the glass, for the upper walls and roof and to back the other bricks.
There is an outstanding sequence of pictures here KOG--Furnace Rebuild 2004-Intro of the Kokomo Glass furnace rebuild. Kokomo makes stained glass and this 12 pot furnace is expected to run for decades. When a pot breaks or has to be replaced, the wall in front of it is taken out, including the T block shown, the old pot is removed and the new (preheated) one installed without taking the furnace down in temperature. This is a recuperative furnace as are most commercial furnaces, but it is not especially clear how it works from the pictures. Rather obviously, the hot gases from the furnace chamber flow up through the "eye", but then what? I think I am correct in saying that the exhaust flows down through the "vent blocks" shown being laid on days 12 and following. The hot exhaust gases are passed through the recuperative chambers being rebuilt as shown on many pages and the intake air is also passed through these. My question is which way of: one way of recuperation is to heat one chamber while the other is being cooled by heating intake air, then change the air flow to pick up heat from the hot chamber and the other is to build two interlocked passageways so that intake air is on one side of a wall and hot exhaust gas on the the other. From the shape of the blocks on Day 9 I would say the latter, one passage being the square inside and the other the outside between the rims. My problem is that they block off the ends of the squares, Day 30-31 and I don't see how the gases flow. Maybe I will find out. Neat pictures of a rare operation in modern America. 2005-09-18
In reading these notes, not a lot is said about safety because (in part) most articles are tightly focused on a narrow topic and because most of my equipment is used only when I am around it, so many safety features needed if I were to leave the equipment running while away or overnight have been omitted.
"My last posting recommended that a furnace should
be no closer than 18 inches (45 cm) from any combustible surface.
Eddie Bernard of "Wet Dog Glass" sent me the following
from the fire code:
Furnaces shall be located so as to minimize exposure to power
equipment, process equipment, and sprinkler risers. Unrelated
stock and combustible materials shall be maintained at a fire-safe
distance but not less than 2.5 ft. (0.76 m) from a furnace, a
furnace heater, or ductwork.
My apologies for the error and thank you Eddie."
Henry Halem
lookingglass@povn.com writes:
> I have been trying for years to set up for glass blowing it
is a hunger that
> I have to feed . I'm having trouble getting started any tips
that will help
> or places that I can pick stuff up reasonable .? My uncle is
a welder and has
> offered to help so all I really need is some advice . I don't
know what fuel
> would be cheaper in the long run. If you have any answers or
help you can and
> will pass on I'd appreciate it. Thanks Jan marie lewis
>
Go to my web site for some information. Generally the cheapest
fuel in areas supplied with it is natural gas. Unfortunately,
many areas (including my house) either do not have enough of a
supply (if I went full stream with natural gas, I would probably
drop the neighborhood pressure drastically) or don't have any
supply (many rural areas.) Natural gas [usage by glassblowers] requires that a higher
pressure, high capacity line. [In Junction Texas, the TTU summer campus had such
a line, but the capacity was such that only one gas using class - glass or
pottery - could be scheduled at a time or it would drop the pressure too far for
the kitchen to operate.]
Electricity can be costly or relatively cheap, but the elements
needed to melt glass are rather costly and must be figured in the
cost. Most people believe batch can not be melted electrically,
and this is usually true, leaving cullet as the remaining choice. [More choices
have become available since this was written and a lot of attention is being
given to molybdenum disulphide rods with more complicated controls. 2003-03]
That leaves propane, which is often the fuel of choice when the
other two are marginally available. Propane has recently gone up
in price. Propane in studio quantities is delivered by truck with a long hose and is commonly
used in rural areas for cooking and water heating. [In the Dallas area, a tank
has to be placed at least 10 feet from any structure or lot line. Not too bad.] Using propane is often a matter of negotiation as far
as price is concerned, with proof of usage leading to lower
prices - one artist I know started (a couple of years ago) at $0.90/gallon
and when usage was shown to be 100 gallons a week, the price was
negotiated down in a couple of steps to about $0.75. Some areas
are served by more than one delivery company, which leads to
possibilities of negotiated discounts or freebies - in particular
no charge for a 250 or 500 pound tank or no charge for placing
("setting") the tank where needed. [in 2003, in Dallas, taking 100#
tanks to refill station, I am paying $2-$2.50 a gallon - 5 pounds.]
This site http://www.regoproducts.com/LPmanual.htm has a lot of information on LP gas and pipe capacity at various pressures. And tank location restrictions http://www.regoproducts.com/placement03.htm 2003-05-31
This article tells of building a pot furnace with vertical sides of a cylindrical shape with a burner port on one side at the rear and a door. The description is based on a furnace built several times by an experienced artist in Texas. It typically lasts for 2 years, sometimes three, being fired for three months or so, three times during the year.
Start by ordering a commercial crucible (pot) from a reliable source (Ipsen, etc.) This will probably cost $125-225 plus $50-75 shipping depending on size. Choose the size to hold enough melted glass for the number of people blowing the number of days you wish blow, 120 pounds per 5 day blowing week for one person being typical, which requires a crucible about 13" OD by 14" tall.
Cut two sheet metal sleeves, one to fit the outer diameter of the crucible and a second larger by Pi times the thickness of the walls, 3" or 4". Both need to be taller than the crucible by at least the thickness of the base (3-5"). Using the 120# crucible and 4" walls, the inner sheet metal is 18"+ by 41" and the outer 18"+ by 67". This height, with the OD of the crucible, makes open volume above the glass greater than the volume of glass, a good ratio being 1.5.
Use sheet metal screws to make a cylinder of the outer piece, (or use a narrower sheet metal to make shallow ring mold) and use insulating castable (see below) to make a base disk (if 4"x 21"dia., 0.80 cu.ft.) It may be best to build the unit on the base where it will be used, so the lip of the crucible is just near waist level, although building the disk on the ground is usually fine.
When the base is fully set, place the crucible centered on the disk inside the metal shell. Pack insulating castable around the crucible and up the inside of the shell and level the top. The lip should be an inch or so above the castable. (0.5 cu.ft with 4" wall, allow .15 cu.ft for sloping sides of crucible.) When set, dust the top of the insulation with plaster dust or other separator to allow removal of the top if the crucible or base cracks. [One comment:: "This won't work, asking for trouble."]
By this point decide whether burner and access ports will be carved out of the set castable or whether an insert will be added. The latter will save castable and work. If inserts are chosen, they can be stiff metal or (more easily) carved Styrofoam. The entry port (if using a separate glory hole) should be about 8" diameter, the burner port about 3-4.5" depending on the burner size. While the burner port can be in the top, in this example it is in the side wall about 3" above the crucible lip. Both openings should be a blunt cone shape, smallest at the outside.
Remove the outer sheet and replace it above the crucible, somewhat over lapping the lower wall. Add legs if needed for support and alignment. Place the inner band of sheet metal (with screws on the inside) around the rim of the crucible and pack insulating castable between the two. (0.5 cu.ft with 4" wall.) Make the top level and even. When set, remove the inner and outer sheets.
To make the top refasten the outer sheet (or use the narrower sheet from the base.) Make a smooth mound of sand, clay or plaster about the diameter of the crucible and about 1.5-2" tall. Cover with soft plastic. Place the outer ring and pack insulating castable carefully. The dome will arch the inside for more even heating and stress. Making the lid thicker than the walls is cost effective because of the higher heat at the top. (0.8 cu.ft. if just over 4" at edges, 1.0 cu.ft. if 5".) Make sure the top is completely set before lifting it.
Use Mizoo castable.
When assembled, carefully heat with a small flame to bring the temperature up past 250 (water removal) then past 500 (setting the inner surface and vapor drive out) then up to 800-900°F to drive off chemically bonded water and then finally up to melting and cooking temperature (1800 to 2450F.) The whole heating process should take 18 or 30 hours the first time.
Uses a Giberson Ceramic burner nozzle on a Ransome [CA] venturi (about $? total) without a blower, fed high pressure propane from a 100 gallon (500#) tank filled by a delivery truck. The vent for the burner is the door, which originally fit too well and had to be carved back to allow a gap.
$20 Metal or block base for height, $165 500 pounds Mizoo castable Insulating Castable, $20 10 feet x 18 inch sheet metal, $200-300 Crucible, Ipsen, $175 Burner Plumbing & Regulator, Tank leased from propane supplier
Decide how much glass to melt, 30-50 pounds is a good middling number.
Buy or build a crucible (pot) to hold that much glass. (Build
is much cheaper, see Independent Glassblower #11 for several
recipes and construction choices; my recipe for a single choice
from them.) Decide whether enough natural gas is available to
provide 250,000-400,000 Btu/hour. If not, setup for propane.
Decide whether the furnace shall be "indoor" (but
certainly not under the house roof), semi-outdoor (roof, but
poles not walls) or outdoors. If to be built where there is
zoning decide whether to tell anyone about it (glass at 2400F
requires a special use permit in Dallas even when in Industrial
Zoning.)
Build or buy a burner to match the gas, head from Dudley
Giberson. Decide whether to make the crucible free-standing or
invested. Invested involves less risk for beginners. Build a
frame to hold the furnace with its doors and burner. If
uncertain, make it 2' cubed. Build a stand to hold the furnace at
the right height for easy access to the glass (usually the edge
of the pot is about elbow height.) Lay a base of insulating fire
brick. Make forms to pour insulating or Missou castable around
the pot. Using Styrofoam, form the arch above the pot, with
burner port and door opening, move the outside form up from
around the pot and pour castable to form the top of the furnace.
Cut or burn the foam out.
Meanwhile build a glory hole from a
barrel and insulating castable and make an annealer from a metal
shell, electric element, firebrick, castable or blanket. Build a
workbench with its long arms. Attach all plumbing, stand back and
light it up, gently, following directions on the castable package.
Meanwhile also buy at least one blow pipe ($100 each), punty ($20-75),
diamond shears ($60), regular shears ($50), jacks ($110+), wood
forming plate ($20), marver ($5-60), high temperature gloves ($75)
and eye protection ($24-150.) Blow glass.
How I built my second glass furnace (Building a cast dome
furnace) 8/25/96
(with comments on things I might have done
different.) (List of materials and sources at end.)
Following the
example of Wimberley Glass Works, I decided to build my furnace
in the bottom section of a 55 gallon (24" diameter) steel
barrel, refurbished, which cost me $15 at a local cooperage
company. I cut it to a height of about 16" based on the
thickness of the bottom and the largest crucible I expected to
put in. I used my cutting torch. An electric saw with a metal
cutting blade can work as well (and a recip saw even better.)
I mixed vermiculite and water glass (sodium silicate) about 1 quart to a cubic foot to make a sticky mass and pressed it into the bottom of the barrel about 3" thick. After setting for a day, it formed a firm layer.
I mixed enough hard castable for a layer 1" thick and poured it on the vermiculite to set. I next should have cast a drain port from a small arch of Styrofoam and a paper form to make the emergency drain. I actually did this later and it was a lot more hassle. It should be as long as the total wall thickness. Cut a hole in the barrel just above the poured floor and line up the port with the hole.
I made sheet metal insert three inches smaller all round than the barrel (which is 24" so the insert was 18" in diameter, needing to be 58" long with the overlap. [58=18 times Pi (3.14159) ]) I used sheet metal screws from the inside to hold the circle. I again mixed the vermiculite and water glass and packed it into the space, working hard to keep the metal shell circular. Make sure you get heavy enough metal, mine was too light (I used leftover flashing, 26 gauge is better choice.) The top of the vermiculite should be 1-2 inches below the top of the barrel. I let that set for a couple of days.
After the vermiculite had set, I undid the shell and reduced its length by 6.3 inches for a diameter change of 2". I drew a 16" circle on a piece of plywood and cut the circle with a saber saw to form the base to hold the form shape and aid in keeping it down. I mixed hard castable and carefully placed it between the shell and the cast vermiculite, working around the form to keep the weight even and holding the base down with several bricks. I added castable up and over the vermiculite to form a top ledge.
Investing the Pot - If you are making an invested pot furnace, place the pot inside the walls and add insulating castable around it. The top inch or more of the castable should be Missou or other hard castable as molten glass will dissolve softer insulating castable.
Casting the Dome - I made some mistakes, which I may pay for in reduced life. If not doing an invested pot (see above), place the pot in the lower portion, on fire brick to raise it to the height of the lower lip of the gathering port. I tried to cut a disk with a hole in it for a lower support for the upper part. I should have cut the end off another barrel (bottom and sides) and cut the hole in the bottom because my efforts warped the flat steel. The hole in the disk should be large enough to allow castable to cover the edge of the steel.
Cut a piece of Styrofoam to the shape of the inside of the dome. I cut a rough pyramid from a block I had bought then rounded the shape to match the diameter of my opening and height above the pot I wanted. I then used long thin dowel to "nail" two cylinders to the dome molding, one for the burner port and one for the gathering port. Each of mine were six inches.
Materials List
Barrel Cooperage
Water Glass Trinity Ceramics
Vermiculite Home Depot
Castable IRC-25, National, Thorp Products
Styrofoam Small quantities from hobby/craft store like MJDesigns,
large from display makers.
Stiff paper for casting
Sheet metal
surplus yard or air conditioning supply,
fairly heavy Plywood for
form support 16" dia,
Saber Saw to cut plywood and barrel if desired. Welding Torch or Electric Saw.
History I fired up the furnace in the early fall of 1996 and had a whole series of problems with the burner plumbing which can be summarized by saying, one burner = one regulator+one blower. This may not be true with an industrial strength blower, but life is much easier if it followed.
It became obvious fairly early that not casting the dome on a flat plate was going to require stuffing some holes with castable or frax or both. That does not seem to have caused serious problems.
In the process of solving the problems, I twice let the glass freeze in the pot, once when I couldn't get it hot enough and once when I ran out of fuel. This placed a severe strain on the pot and a crack appeared while reheating after the first freeze. Then, in a maneuver I can't recall reasoning out, but remember specifically doing, I turned the pot so the crack was in line with the burner flame and when I got the problems with the plumbing fixed, the crack enlarged and drained the glass into the base of the furnace. Which is where I stand at this writing (11/26/96) I am going to have to lift the dome (and maybe cast a new one), remove the pot. Maybe chip out the base of glass. Install a new pot and try again. Make another pot somewhere in here. [When redone, still being used with second pot in 2003]
As I build my equipment on a limited budget and grope my way toward being able to blow more than once a year, I have been following a sequence that seems logical: So far it has been annealer, flat grinder, and small glory hole. This is some notes on the last. This is a recipe, like in a cookbook. It tells how one person did it and why. NOTE: I now (8/22/94) feel that the most important step in furnace/glory hole design is the door. Each door design requires a different structure and thinking through the door will require that the frame work for that door be included in the overall design. My design (below) has very little structure above the base. This made adding doors and other features more difficult. My rolling door design works very nicely. It is best if there is a frame structure up to the top of the furnace, with the opening even with the front of the frame. This will allow adding any of the following: a variety of doors, bracing rails to hold in part of the furnace, mounting rails for the burner, sheet metal holders for cheaper poured insulation, and sheet metal holders for weather protection.
Originally, I planned on building a glory hole about the size of my final needs using ceramic fiber blanket inside a barrel (12-16"ID, 3" insulation.) I changed my mind and built a smaller one from insulating fire brick for several reasons:
Insulating fire brick (IFB) is sold by A.P.Green only in boxes of 25 in various temperature ranges. The 2300 degree bricks are $1.82 each, while 2600 are $2.41 (45.50/60.25 a box. Other places sell singles at over $3 each.) I bought the higher temp for future flexibility. I also got 8 ordinary hard fire bricks ($1.38 each). Bricks are 4.5"x9"x2.5" which means they are modular (line up) in two directions but not the third. [I should have bought 5 splits (4.5x9x1.25) also, did later, for the roof, see below.] I had an unblown burner, 78,000 Btu, from Seattle Pottery for $33.50, which delivers Btu about half the cost of other units (0.43 $/kBtu vs $1.16 for a 99,000 Btu, $0.71 for 200,000), because, they tell me, they buy them in bulk for the kilns they make.
After trying this burner for a while, I ended up buying a blower for $40 and building a burner head of pipe (covered in BURNERS) To avoid extra structure, I decided to make a unit that would be bridged (topped) by a brick. That meant 8" wide (1/2" support at each end) and 9" tall using IFB on end for the sides. I planned to use some bricks to reduce heat leakage at corners, simply setting them in place. [I later actually used mostly scrap insulating blanket from the annealer.] I could make various depths depending on how I used the bricks. If I went with 2.5" wall thickness I could get a lot more depth than if I tried for 4.5" all the way around. I had originally planned on 4.5", which would have required all the bricks in a box, but found that making an access hole for the burner flame was stupid unless it went through a brick in the 2.5" direction. For stability and fire proofing, I decided to build on a concrete square I just happened to have around (okay, it was a footer left over from leveling my house, 16x16x4" about $3 at the friendly local concrete lot.)
Problems during early use: Unclamped bricks separated with
heat, leaking flame. Originally the burner was installed in the
hole, resulting in blowback and unburned gases in the chamber
even though half the front was open. The burner was pulled back
out of the hole, firing its flame into the hole and carrying air
with it and the rear bricks were pulled apart to provide a vent.
Later a pipe was added as a chimney and the size of the vent was
controlled with ceramic fiber blanket. Even later, a blown burner
was used.
Insulating fire brick (IFB) is astonishing. It is very light,
gritty and crumbly. Its insulating qualities are so high that
with a temperature over 1500 inside, I have used my fingers (cautiously)
to adjust the brick blocking the opening. It is not very strong.
It can be drilled easily, and most efficiently, with a spade bit
turning at fairly slow speed in a variable speed drill. IFB is
fairly weak and I have cracked a brick just using it, clamping it
in place at the front of the glory hole. [This is what led to the
change in the roof design.) I wired the pipe for the vent stack
in place and the wires burned through. I tapped the pipe for 1/4"
and mounted a bracket on the clamp angle iron. 2/22/93 [continued
below picture]
This picture shows the firebrick stacked unit with
frax and fiberglass insulation added outside with the door made
of clamped up IFB rolling on wheels at the bottom of the frame.
The 20# propane tanks are manifolded using a commercial Y connector with a valve to share the flow to reduce
freezing. The shield/yoke in the picture is still being used in 2005. Hose
is not a great choice because if in a fire, it can burn through releasing high
pressure propane. Hose must be rated for propane - not air compressor
hose.
The firebrick propped up was removed not long after. I
replaced the lower IFB at the front entrance with regular fire
brick and clamped it, which cuts the opening permanently in half
until I rework it. I probably need to consider a door frame, a
holder, maybe for each part to keep support of the soft brick.
Maybe I need a bag of castable to experiment with.
Design as of June 1994: The clamped roof bricks were cracking in
the center, dropping fire brick into the melted glass. The roof
was lifted off. Several splits of hard fire brick were laid flat
and the fire brick replaced. Scrap insulating ceramic blanket was
laid on top and fitted against the outside wall opposite the
burner. Ordinary fiberglass attic insulation was fastened to the
outside of this and to the back. Where accidentally exposed to
the escaping heat of the furnace, it melted. But it cheaply added
to the ease of bringing the glory hole up to heat.
The door has been a continuing problem. I have used IFB, moving
them with a gloved hand, and dropping and breaking them. I have
used blanket in various awkward ways.
I now consider selecting a door design that moves easily and
stays in place, then building its supporting structure as more
important than most of the rest of the design. Built summer 94.
"Kilns made entirely of insulating brick have some
disadvantages. Although they retain heat efficiently, they cool
down quite rapidly because of the low heat capacity of the
material. Compared to a hard fire brick, an insulating brick will
not soak up nearly as many Btu's during a fire. Hard fire brick
will last many times longer. The life of insulating fire brick
can be prolonged by coating inside surfaces with kiln wash or
commercial sealing coatings. Initial cost is much higher." [MF
$1.38 vs $2.28 '93 price in Dallas, but insulating sold only by
box of 25.] Kilns, Rhodes p.115
I melt glass cullet in small clay crucibles (pots) that I made from a recipe in The Independent Glassblower, notes available. I waited far too long to do this and tried several things along the way, including clay pots, Corning Ware, and Corelware.
How I built my domed furnace
As I start to write this in March 2002, I
am astounded I did not write it down before this even though
there are pictures of the furnace on the website in various
places. I am now pledged to getting this thing up and working.

At right is a picture of my furnace as it has been sitting around for a couple of years (years???). The door shown here was made in a pie tin with a couple of bolts cast in place and broke during moving. A much better design is shown further down.
This unit consists of about half of a 55 gallon drum forming the bottom, a steel frame to hold it along with the rails for mounting the door and the burner (not shown), and a piece of the other end of the barrel to hold the dome. The barrel was cut with a reciprocating saw with a metal blade. The end holding the dome was trimmed to have a low edge under the opening and a higher back. Most of the middle of the flat end of the barrel was cut out, leaving about a 2" rim to support the dome, the rim being protected from the heat by the castable and a layer of frax between the two.
The is the door setup that I have just prepared to use.
The bolts go to a steel band, not to something in the castable.
The band is welded to a steel loop that was raised 1/4" off
the flat so castable would flow under it. The ends of the the
steel loop (at the bottom) are linked by a bolt so the loop is
in compression on the castable. The door was cast by laying sheet
plastic on a flat area, setting the steel frame on the plastic,
then folding the plastic up over the frame and moving bricks in
to the sides to hold the plastic up. Castable was then mixed and
poured into place, rodded to debubble it and settle it and then
the plastic was folded over to keep the whole moist while it set.
Lines from the folded plastic show on the surface facing us.
Dual purpose barrel furnace/gloryhole
Divas II 7/20/97 I have been thinking about a simple starter
furnace. This thought begins with using a standard 55 gallon drum
(not the 30 I used for my 11" glory hole) to end up with a
10-12" glory hole, which would normally end up with 8-6"
walls. Then make a clay pot using the recipe from IGB that I have
been using to make a longer narrower trough-like pot - or boat has it has been
named. Cast the
glory hole off-center with the glass trough below it so that it
is well supported by castable, yet will have less insulation
below it, thus lowering the temperature of the glass somewhat.
The question really is: Is the extra hassle of making this
arrangement over building a 30 gallon barrel glory hole and a
furnace in half a 55 gallon drum worth the savings of reduced
complications (running two burners) and of the cost of buying two
regulators and two burners and two blowers) and nuisance of
making two frames. Another positive is not having to cut the 55
gallon drum. A remaining question is whether an attempt should be
made to cast the pot into the furnace during or whether the
central core should be shaped like a tear drop (harder to make)
to allow setting the trough into place after casting. Even as I
write this, I can think of three or four good ways to do the
placing after casting and nothing but problems trying to hold the
trough in place during casting.
Steps in construction: (lots of details left out.)
1. Make an inner and outer form for the trough, of Styrofoam or
plaster. Use plaster to make a mold from the outside, so there is a
plaster image of the pot to use later.
2. Mix the pot clay mixture, cure and pound in the form, leaving
to dry in the outer.
3. Stand the barrel on end and mix vermiculite and sodium
silicate to a sticky mass and pack into the bottom to form a
level surface and reduce the length of the inside.
4. Cast a layer of insulating castable across the vermiculite to
form a back wall.
5. Cut a 6" hole in the wall of the barrel for the burner.
Make a sheet metal tube to fit in the hole, trimming the end to
fit against the sleeve next.
6. Using sheet metal, form a sleeve inside the barrel and pack
the space between the barrel and the sleeve with the vermiculite
mixture, 2-3" thick.
7. Using sheets of Styrofoam from a hobby store, cut a series of
disks and tear drop outline (pattern provided) pieces and stack
these to form the shape of the inside of the furnace. Carve the
lip of the door into the end block of foam. Glue the layers and
run a threaded rod through the middle, bolting it to a disk of
plywood. Use the plywood to mount the form across the mouth of
the barrel on 2x4's. Weight or bolt down the 2x4's to keep the
core in place. [Alternately, make a cylinder and use the plaster model on the
outside to form space for the boat/trough]
8. Cast a burner port, 6" OD. 4" ID if using a
Giberson burner, otherwise shape as suggested.
9. After removing the sleeve, carefully remove the tube making
the burner port. and install the cast burner port against the
wall of the foam. Remove some of the foam as needed. Plug the
port with foam to keep errant castable out.
10. Using a slightly sloppy castable mix, pour in castable along
the walls, working it down with a poker, casting the inside in
one piece. Castable will rise above the vermiculite and spread to
the rim of the barrel.
11. Allow to cure for several days. Remove the Styrofoam by
digging it out (or burning but I don't think we should mention
that, pollution hazard, you know, also the burning foam gets
hotter than the castable should be at this point.)
12. Carefully hoist the barrel onto its horizontal frame. Suggest
a frame that allows rocking it there.
13. Using castable as mortar, fit the clay pot into place,
smoothing the seam at the top.
14. Using a small burner, start to bring the thing to heat,
slowly (70F per hour is recommended, holding at about 300 and 600
and 1000) also baking the clay pot.
15. Also cast the door and build the door frame.
Support frame and hoisting mechanism for furnace. Angle iron if use once, pipe slipped in pipe if repeat, as for portable. Weld a frame that extends from back about 6" and from front and middle about 2 feet. Along the line of the barrel, attach two (8-10 feet) long pipes or angles for pull handles. Tip the barrel on the back frame then down onto the mid frame and finally forward over the front frame. Under the back frame, add another frame to catch the back at this new height. Lift the barrel onto the back frame and add front frame to support new height. Add back frame, etc. Rocker frame or hoist frame? How many inches gained on each move with rocker? Hoist with lever across center of frame instead of dual come-a-longs or jacks. Raise with single hydraulic jack, bottle jack placed in middle (hollow frame)?
2000-01-20
I don't think any particular burner is more efficient at best
setting than some other burner, although some are definitely more
efficient at a wider range of settings (heat output) than others.
Dudley Giberson http://www.joppaglass.com/
would be a person to ask about that. I would expect a gas
analyzer to be very useful in determining efficiency of burners
and waste of gas up the flue.
The only ways I know to improve efficiency of an otherwise well
adjusted furnace are to add insulation or use recuperation.
Charles Correll
http://www.blownglass.org/~correll/
is the best known source of this info. In bigger operations
recupe involves building two beds of firebrick and venting
exhaust gases through one while bringing air in through a heated
one. In Correll's and other small designs, the flue is more or
less divided, so that exhaust going up passes near blown in air.
Stainless steel tubes are used in the upper (cooler) part and
silicon carbide (kiln shelf) dividers near the exhaust entry.
Since most people going to this expense want the air as hot as
possible, problems arise because when the air is too hot, it will
ignite any gas mixed with it, so the burner has to be changed to
add the gas just as the hot air is entering the furnace.
There are two basic designs for recuperative and they
both work, but the added expense is worth it only if you are
pulling a lot of glass.
The design that works for studio workers is to vent the
exhaust gas through two connected chambers, the first hotter
chamber having silicon carbide (kiln shelf) plates as separators,
the second, longer, cooler uses stainless steel as dividers.
The intake air is blown through the other half of two
chambers, getting it very hot. The furnace has to be
designed in inject the fuel into the hot air stream at the last
moment because the air is hot enough to ignite it. Since
the goal is to use added fuel to raise the temp to 2200F, it
saves fuel to raise it from 500-700F if you can get it from room
temp to 600F for nearly free (after cost of installation)
Sure it works.
For very large tank furnaces (ie Libbey glass) very large
banks of fire brick are built, two sets, so the intake air is
pushed through one set and the exhaust through the other.
Periodically, the flow is reversed and the heat built up in the
stack of exhaust bricks is used to preheat the intake air.
Works there too, but furnace capacity is measured in tons, not
pounds.
A third choice, not mentioned often, is to dilute
the exhaust air to cool it below super heat and use that to heat
water or through a heat exchanger to heat household air. Great in Vermont,
not so useful in Texas.
From Craft Web Glass Forum with permission
Peter Bowles
Registered: Sep 2002
Location: Perth, Western Australia
First off, work out what your weekly needs of glass will be. Ideally, you only
want to fill once a week.
Do you have natural gas or bottle gas?
There is no real point to any discussion till you have these two points in hand.
Then all the following:
Proper combustion all the way through from low fire to high fire.
Actuator control rather than an on / off high / lo fire. With PID.
A burner system that can deliver enough energy to get to temp easily for melting
and rebound between fills, and the capacity to easily deliver small amounts of
energy to bring the furnace down after melt.
Recuperation.
Quiet blower.
Independent controller and tc for over temp and under temp alarms.
Easy clean drain, I've put a small pot at the bottom of mine for all the slag to
run off into.
Easy door and good gathering angles to the bottom of the pot.
If more than one person is going to drive it then it has to be nothing more than
pressing buttons. Mine isnt and I tweak air and gas to get proper combustion at
top temps and working temps for best efficiency.
Easy pot change.
A damper on the flue.
Pete
10-02-2006 04:30 AM
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