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#1
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![]() This is a common misunderstanding. Often people state that glass is not solid but a super cooled liquid. Silica's melting point is around 1200C and temperatures between 10-even as high as 40C are so far away that even if Glass was not truly crystallized the time it would take for glass to flow to a noticeable difference is beyond a human time frame. The better explanation for thicker glass at the bottom of old buildings or ancient churches is the actual glass production process and glaziers preferences of setting glass with the heavier side at the bottom.
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210 Gallon slowly gaining population. Foxface, Naso, Coral Beauty, 2 Clowns, 2 Chromis, Orange Anthias, and Striped Goby. |
#2
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![]() I"ve seen sagging glass however this is a good deflection of my experiances
http://math.ucr.edu/home/baez/physic...ass/glass.html alt |
#3
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![]() I can only go by what a glass glazer has told me. Nice artical though. sorry guys I have been missled have to go bust a knee or two...lol
Bill Last edited by bvlester; 01-23-2010 at 06:53 AM. |