PLATE GLASS
The large sheets of plate glass used in store windows are not blown, but rolled. The molten glass is poured from the fire clay pots upon a cast-iron table and is rolled flat by means of a large iron roller (Fig. 24). The glass is then in the shape of plate glass, but is rough on both sides. It is annealed for a number of days and then is ground smooth on both sides, first with coarse emery, then with finer and finer emery, and is finally polished with rouge. The result is the beautifully polished plate glass we see in large windows.
OPTICAL GLASS
The United States and Great Britain made great strides in the manufacture of optical glass during the war and there are now many kinds on the market. They are used in making the lenses, prisms, and mirrors for optical instruments.
Optical glass is made in much the same way as ordinary glass, but great care is taken: first, to see that the materials are pure; second, to stir the glass constantly, as it cools from the molten to the viscous state, to make it as uniform as possible; and third, to cool it very slowly in the annealing process, to avoid strains.
QUARTZ GLASS
FIG. 25
A POLLYWOG
An entirely new glass has been placed on the market in quantity in recent years. It is made by melting very pure quartz sand at a temperature of 3000° F. and cooling it fairly rapidly. It has the very valuable property of expanding and contracting very, very slightly when heated and cooled. Thus there is practically no internal strain set up when it is heated or cooled quickly and it does not break. It can be heated red hot, for example, and then plunged into cold water without breaking. It is probable that this glass will be in universal use in a very few years.