GTBL042-14 GTBL042-Callister-v2 August 29, 2007 8:59
592 • Chapter 14 / Synthesis, Fabrication, and Processing of Materials
Pressing operation
Gob
Parison
mold
Suspended
parison
Finishing
mold
Compressed air
Figure 14.18 The press-
and-blow technique for
producing a glass bottle.
(Adapted from C. J.
Phillips,Glass: The
Miracle Maker.
Reproduced by
permission of Pitman
Publishing Ltd.,
London.)
pressing in a mold. This piece is inserted into a finishing or blow mold and forced to
conform to the mold contours by the pressure created from a blast of air.
Drawing is used to form long glass pieces, such as sheet, rod, tubing, and fibers,
that have a constant cross section.
Up until the late 1950s, sheet glass (or plate) was produced by casting (or drawing)
the glass into a plate shape, grinding both faces to make them flat and parallel,
and finally, polishing the faces to make the sheet transparent—a procedure that
was relatively expensive. A more economical float process was patented in 1959 in
England. With this technique (represented schematically in Figure 14.19), the molten
Raw
Materials
Heating
Zone
Fire
Polishing
Zone
Heater
Combustion
Gases
Controlled
Atmosphere
Float Bath Furnace
Cooling
Zone
Annealing
Furnace (Lehr)
Cutting
Section
Melting Furnace
Molten Glass
Liquid Tin
Figure 14.19 Schematic diagram showing the float process for making sheet glass.
(Courtesy of Pilkington Group Limited.)