Added for You
#1 in Business Subscribe Email Print

You are here: Home > Business > Business > Ceramic and Pottery Defects 2: Defects from Raw Materials and Batching Errors

Tags

  • drier
  • thing
  • labels
  • years nobody
  • these temperatures
  • lignitethat should

  • Links

  • 3 Attitudes That Can Be Fatal to Your Small Business Success
  • What if all Religion Disappears Tomorrow; Would There be Chaos?
  • Goldilocks And The Three Anti Spyware Products
  • Added for You - Ceramic and Pottery Defects 2: Defects from Raw Materials and Batching Errors

    Ceramic and Pottery Defects 4: Defects Generated During Drying Operations
    Drying operations relate to plastic forming operations and casting operations. Forced drying in controlled driers expedites production and guarantees continual controlled production flow.Driers are usually built into automatic casting machines and roll forming machines. The drier is often designed to accommodate the different stages of drying. Airflow is adjustable throughout the drier.When a piece of ceramic ware is first formed, the particles are separated by a water layer which can be easily and safely removed. For that reason, excessive heat can be supplied at this stage of drying.Once the particles touch, the process becomes diffusion controlled and the water molecules must move slowly through the body matrix.Finally, the last tightly held water must be removed.These last two steps require careful heat and humidity control in the drier. Airflow must be controlled locally. See Ceramics: Industrial Processing and Testing by John T. Jones and M. F. Berard.For automatic plastic forming operations incorporating built-in driers, the slip must be controlled as to particle size, specific gravity, and visc
    water and testing with a soluble silver nitrate solution. A milky precipitate is silver chloride. Salts cause blisters!

    We had soy beans once in one of the plants I worked. The clay picked up the beans from a hopper car. They make big holes in your ware but they are easy to screen out if you have screening in your operation, which we didn’t!

    There is a funny story that goes with the soy beans but I don’t have room to tell it here. I’ll save that for another article.

    Particle Size

    One of the most serious formulating errors is in not controlling particle size in the batch recipe.

    For example, if you use too much of a certain clay having a very fine particle size, you will have problems. Let me say this, you must choose the correct particle size distribution for your process.

    Slip casting requires a coarser particle size distribution than a plastic forming process for the same formulation. What does all this nonsense mean? You must use some coarser grained clay(s) in your casting process. If you don't you will still be trying to cast a piece when the next millennium comes in.

    If you want to have control of your casting process, then use a coarse-grained kaolin plus a fine-grained kaolin, and a coarse-grained ball clay plus a fine-grained ball clay. Changing the ratio of fine to coarse clays will give you control. You must maintain the total amount of kaolin and the total amount of ball clay to preserve color of the product.

    Look at the particle size distribution of the clays you are using in your process. This information should be provided to you with each shipment.

    Look at the particle size portion that says <0.5 microns. (If that information is not there, the <2 m

    Nursing Resumes
    What to Include in Nursing ResumesNursing resumes are slightly different from every other resume that you would send out. Being that nursing is a specialized profession, you need to remember a few things when putting together your first resume. Nursing resumes can be difficult to write because they will not include the same information as a standard resume trying to secure an office position. Read through the tips below before you start sending out your resume to potential employers.First off, remember that nursing resumes will not include all past work experience. When applying for an office job, you usually show all of your past work experience, no matter how irrelevant it may sound. But remember that nursing is a specialized profession. You want to make sure that you put down your experience relative to nursing and downplay the rest of your work experience. This is not to say that you cannot include other work experience on nursing resumes, just be sure to not let those jobs overshadow your nursing experience.Remember to include all nursing related experience on your resume. Anything that pertains to n
    Some folks use materials right out of the ground to make ceramics. A high-volume example of this is the brick manufacturer up the road. (If you don’t have clay or shale where you live, there is no brick manufacturer up the road.)

    Brick manufacturers usually mine clay by the open pit method. That means that they usually don’t tunnel for the clay. They carefully remove the overburden (the dirt, weeds, trees, old cars, and what-have-you on top) leaving a clean clay or shale face. Then they mine the clay or shale and deliver it to the factory.

    At the factory, it is crushed or ground as required, water is mixed in, and the clay is extruded by means of an auger into a very long rectangular cross section that is cut into brick as it moves along the conveyer belt.

    Now days, everything is automatic in most plants including the loading and unloading of bricks into and out of the kiln. (See Ceramics: Industrial Processing & Testing, John T. Jones & M. F. Berard, Iowa State University Press)

    In other words, brick manufactures have a one component composition (the clay or shale). Now there is always an exception. Clays and shales happen to have some sulfate content. This is not good. You might get blistering or scumming or some other unpleasant defect.

    What do they do?

    They add barium carbonate or some other chemical to tie up the sulfates because barium forms insoluble sulfates. These materials are not premixed into the clay. They are just sprinkled on the clay and the extruder does sufficient mixing.

    I’ll tell you a secret. Some other manufacturers may add barium sulfate such as the sanitary ware manufacturers that manufacture your bathroom fixtures. Some potters add it too.

    Vanadium compounds cause scumming in otherwise pretty white bricks.

    Defects caused by raw materials are usually related to impurities or particle size. The defect can turn up at any time in the process. Here are some examples of defects caused by impurities:

    Impurity Defects

    Lignite

    Lignite is common in many clays. It can be hard anthracite or softer bituminous coal or lignite which is softer than the first two.

    Screening can reduce lignite from slurries.

    Soda ash can react with soft lignite and turn it into a useful colloid that will keep the slurry dispersed.

    In other words, some lignite can be beneficial in slip casting operations and other operations that use slurry. But the hard anthracite and other coal varieties are not good. They can cause blisters and pits during bisk and glost firing operations.

    Clay companies have some control over the size and amount of lignite in their clays (often by blending.

    You can run a screen analysis on the material and see how much lignite remains on the screens. If it is higher than the previous shipments, call the clay company and say these words: “What’s with all this lignite!”

    That should get their attention. Once I said, "What is all this plastic?" (The filter bags had melted in the air floatation equipment.)

    Make sure you blame them for all defects generated for the next six months. (Hey, you think I’m kidding! Make that the next two months or whenever that batch of clay is used up.)

    Grit

    We had a recurring blistering problem in fine china where I once worked and for years nobody could figure out what was causing it.

    I was new with the company but not inexperienced in solving material problems.

    I called each of our suppliers and said that we had blisters and it was their fault.

    The representative from a kaolin company asked, “What’s the grit?”

    I wasn’t sure what he was talking about because I had not used that particular clay before. Rather than tell him that I didn’t know what he was talking about, I said, “Hold on a minute.”

    I asked the quality control manager, “What’s the grit in that stuff?”

    He had a questioning look on his face despite his 30 years of service. He pulled out the specification sheet for the last shipment, found that there was such a thing as "grit," and gave me a number.

    The number represented the amount of coarse material that showed up during a screen analysis of the clay. For this particular clay, the grit was in the form of mica.

    Mica is not good!

    Hearing the number, the representative said, “That is too high! I’ll call the mine!”

    We set a control standard and never had that problem again.

    I‘d paid my first years salary in five minutes a few days after joining the company.

    Iron and Manganese Compounds, Silicon Carbide, Soy Beans and Salts

    Sometimes clay manufacturers ship clays to storage areas by rail, ship, or barge. Dockside raw material storage is always dangerous for contamination. The reason is that these facilities ship iron ores, ferrosilicon, silicon carbide and they are not very careful about cleaning out a shed of ferrosilicon or other contaminant before loading it with a shipload of clay. (We changed from bulk to Super Sack® shipments.)

    Some of these materials give off oxygen when they decompose. That occurs at some characteristic temperature.

    We used the same British china clay in two different plants.

    In one plant we had blisters in our decorated ware, the worst possible condition.

    The other factory using the same clay didn’t. Why? The bisk temperature was much higher in the not affected plant. The contaminant, a manganese compound, decomposed before glazing and decoration.

    The affected plant had both lower bisk and glost temperatures. The material did not fully decompose at these temperatures and bubbles were still appearing at the decorating temperatures.

    The problem was complicated because we had to prove that the supplier caused a heavy loss that their insurance company should pay.

    I’ll not go into the details because they proved we were right and did pay.

    The reason for reimbursement was that I had requested them to never ship us material from a certain pit (mine). It had caused the company loses for years and I wanted no more of it.

    They shipped from that pit rather than shipping us the processed clay that I specified.

    Identification of impurities can be tricky without a Scanning Electron Microscope (SEM).

    Heavy liquids can be used, but that is a nuisance. Microscopes are good for those who know how to use them. You can look at the contaminants from the heavy liquid separation.

    Sometimes you must use an outside lab if you don’t have the correct equipment.

    To isolate a contaminant before you send samples out, elutriate clays and screen non clays.

    To elutriate a clay, take about ten pounds of clay and keep washing it down until only the contaminant is left. Put the contaminant in your body or glaze and reproduce the defect you are seeing in production.

    Chloride can be detected from salts by washing the clay with deionized water and testing with a soluble silver nitrate solution. A milky precipitate is silver chloride. Salts cause blisters!

    We had soy beans once in one of the plants I worked. The clay picked up the beans from a hopper car. They make big holes in your ware but they are easy to screen out if you have screening in your operation, which we didn’t!

    There is a funny story that goes with the soy beans but I don’t have room to tell it here. I’ll save that for another article.

    Particle Size

    One of the most serious formulating errors is in not controlling particle size in the batch recipe.

    For example, if you use too much of a certain clay having a very fine particle size, you will have problems. Let me say this, you must choose the correct particle size distribution for your process.

    Slip casting requires a coarser particle size distribution than a plastic forming process for the same formulation. What does all this nonsense mean? You must use some coarser grained clay(s) in your casting process. If you don't you will still be trying to cast a piece when the next millennium comes in.

    If you want to have control of your casting process, then use a coarse-grained kaolin plus a fine-grained kaolin, and a coarse-grained ball clay plus a fine-grained ball clay. Changing the ratio of fine to coarse clays will give you control. You must maintain the total amount of kaolin and the total amount of ball clay to preserve color of the product.

    Look at the particle size distribution of the clays you are using in your process. This information should be provided to you with each shipment.

    Look at the particle size portion that says <0.5 microns. (If that information is not there, the <2 mi

    Does Small Business CRM Really Help Your Business
    CRM is the most talked about software in today’s business world. CRM is an easy-to-use software tool suitable for any small business needing a complete, cost effective and hassle-free solution for managing sales, customers and bookkeeping as well as day to day invoicing.The all-in-one sales and marketing CRM software program facilitates small businesses to double their sales at a faster pace. From lead generation, to placing an order or even the follow up of the same, CRM is the apt solution in efficiently managing your small business day to day operations.However why do we require CRM software in the first place is what crosses our minds. The following will give you a better insight as to what you can expect when CRM is adopted in your small business.It helps in the automatic integration of the sales marketing and the customers data base,Ensures a faster access to vital customer information from any where any time.Inexpensive efficient marketing campaigning management system Next to zero maintenance costs No additional installation and infrastructural expensesInstant integra
    m compounds cause scumming in otherwise pretty white bricks.

    Defects caused by raw materials are usually related to impurities or particle size. The defect can turn up at any time in the process. Here are some examples of defects caused by impurities:

    Impurity Defects

    Lignite

    Lignite is common in many clays. It can be hard anthracite or softer bituminous coal or lignite which is softer than the first two.

    Screening can reduce lignite from slurries.

    Soda ash can react with soft lignite and turn it into a useful colloid that will keep the slurry dispersed.

    In other words, some lignite can be beneficial in slip casting operations and other operations that use slurry. But the hard anthracite and other coal varieties are not good. They can cause blisters and pits during bisk and glost firing operations.

    Clay companies have some control over the size and amount of lignite in their clays (often by blending.

    You can run a screen analysis on the material and see how much lignite remains on the screens. If it is higher than the previous shipments, call the clay company and say these words: “What’s with all this lignite!”

    That should get their attention. Once I said, "What is all this plastic?" (The filter bags had melted in the air floatation equipment.)

    Make sure you blame them for all defects generated for the next six months. (Hey, you think I’m kidding! Make that the next two months or whenever that batch of clay is used up.)

    Grit

    We had a recurring blistering problem in fine china where I once worked and for years nobody could figure out what was causing it.

    I was new with the company but not inexperienced in solving material problems.

    I called each of our suppliers and said that we had blisters and it was their fault.

    The representative from a kaolin company asked, “What’s the grit?”

    I wasn’t sure what he was talking about because I had not used that particular clay before. Rather than tell him that I didn’t know what he was talking about, I said, “Hold on a minute.”

    I asked the quality control manager, “What’s the grit in that stuff?”

    He had a questioning look on his face despite his 30 years of service. He pulled out the specification sheet for the last shipment, found that there was such a thing as "grit," and gave me a number.

    The number represented the amount of coarse material that showed up during a screen analysis of the clay. For this particular clay, the grit was in the form of mica.

    Mica is not good!

    Hearing the number, the representative said, “That is too high! I’ll call the mine!”

    We set a control standard and never had that problem again.

    I‘d paid my first years salary in five minutes a few days after joining the company.

    Iron and Manganese Compounds, Silicon Carbide, Soy Beans and Salts

    Sometimes clay manufacturers ship clays to storage areas by rail, ship, or barge. Dockside raw material storage is always dangerous for contamination. The reason is that these facilities ship iron ores, ferrosilicon, silicon carbide and they are not very careful about cleaning out a shed of ferrosilicon or other contaminant before loading it with a shipload of clay. (We changed from bulk to Super Sack® shipments.)

    Some of these materials give off oxygen when they decompose. That occurs at some characteristic temperature.

    We used the same British china clay in two different plants.

    In one plant we had blisters in our decorated ware, the worst possible condition.

    The other factory using the same clay didn’t. Why? The bisk temperature was much higher in the not affected plant. The contaminant, a manganese compound, decomposed before glazing and decoration.

    The affected plant had both lower bisk and glost temperatures. The material did not fully decompose at these temperatures and bubbles were still appearing at the decorating temperatures.

    The problem was complicated because we had to prove that the supplier caused a heavy loss that their insurance company should pay.

    I’ll not go into the details because they proved we were right and did pay.

    The reason for reimbursement was that I had requested them to never ship us material from a certain pit (mine). It had caused the company loses for years and I wanted no more of it.

    They shipped from that pit rather than shipping us the processed clay that I specified.

    Identification of impurities can be tricky without a Scanning Electron Microscope (SEM).

    Heavy liquids can be used, but that is a nuisance. Microscopes are good for those who know how to use them. You can look at the contaminants from the heavy liquid separation.

    Sometimes you must use an outside lab if you don’t have the correct equipment.

    To isolate a contaminant before you send samples out, elutriate clays and screen non clays.

    To elutriate a clay, take about ten pounds of clay and keep washing it down until only the contaminant is left. Put the contaminant in your body or glaze and reproduce the defect you are seeing in production.

    Chloride can be detected from salts by washing the clay with deionized water and testing with a soluble silver nitrate solution. A milky precipitate is silver chloride. Salts cause blisters!

    We had soy beans once in one of the plants I worked. The clay picked up the beans from a hopper car. They make big holes in your ware but they are easy to screen out if you have screening in your operation, which we didn’t!

    There is a funny story that goes with the soy beans but I don’t have room to tell it here. I’ll save that for another article.

    Particle Size

    One of the most serious formulating errors is in not controlling particle size in the batch recipe.

    For example, if you use too much of a certain clay having a very fine particle size, you will have problems. Let me say this, you must choose the correct particle size distribution for your process.

    Slip casting requires a coarser particle size distribution than a plastic forming process for the same formulation. What does all this nonsense mean? You must use some coarser grained clay(s) in your casting process. If you don't you will still be trying to cast a piece when the next millennium comes in.

    If you want to have control of your casting process, then use a coarse-grained kaolin plus a fine-grained kaolin, and a coarse-grained ball clay plus a fine-grained ball clay. Changing the ratio of fine to coarse clays will give you control. You must maintain the total amount of kaolin and the total amount of ball clay to preserve color of the product.

    Look at the particle size distribution of the clays you are using in your process. This information should be provided to you with each shipment.

    Look at the particle size portion that says <0.5 microns. (If that information is not there, the <2 m

    How Top Event and Meeting Professionals Increase Profits!
    Success as an event and meeting professional has never been more challenging, due to increasing competition and higher demands to meet business objectives.Personal pressures are equally daunting. Long, stress-filled hours at work can strain commitments to family and health.If you feel a little overwhelmed, you're not alone. Merely projecting a veneer of confidence isn't an option. So what can you do?The best kept "secret" to success revealed by successful business professionalsDespite demanding circumstances some event and meeting professionals achieve results that others don't, no matter how hard they try. What is their secret?Two words: Business Coaching.Top event and meeting professionals understand and appreciate the value of hiring an experienced and objective guide to reach the next milestone of success - someone to help them make the connection to what matters most to them in the heat of the moment - someone with the skills and experience needed to enhance their own performance.But despite business coaching's proven track record of success, some people resist using a coach themselves. Their resi
    roblems.

    I called each of our suppliers and said that we had blisters and it was their fault.

    The representative from a kaolin company asked, “What’s the grit?”

    I wasn’t sure what he was talking about because I had not used that particular clay before. Rather than tell him that I didn’t know what he was talking about, I said, “Hold on a minute.”

    I asked the quality control manager, “What’s the grit in that stuff?”

    He had a questioning look on his face despite his 30 years of service. He pulled out the specification sheet for the last shipment, found that there was such a thing as "grit," and gave me a number.

    The number represented the amount of coarse material that showed up during a screen analysis of the clay. For this particular clay, the grit was in the form of mica.

    Mica is not good!

    Hearing the number, the representative said, “That is too high! I’ll call the mine!”

    We set a control standard and never had that problem again.

    I‘d paid my first years salary in five minutes a few days after joining the company.

    Iron and Manganese Compounds, Silicon Carbide, Soy Beans and Salts

    Sometimes clay manufacturers ship clays to storage areas by rail, ship, or barge. Dockside raw material storage is always dangerous for contamination. The reason is that these facilities ship iron ores, ferrosilicon, silicon carbide and they are not very careful about cleaning out a shed of ferrosilicon or other contaminant before loading it with a shipload of clay. (We changed from bulk to Super Sack® shipments.)

    Some of these materials give off oxygen when they decompose. That occurs at some characteristic temperature.

    We used the same British china clay in two different plants.

    In one plant we had blisters in our decorated ware, the worst possible condition.

    The other factory using the same clay didn’t. Why? The bisk temperature was much higher in the not affected plant. The contaminant, a manganese compound, decomposed before glazing and decoration.

    The affected plant had both lower bisk and glost temperatures. The material did not fully decompose at these temperatures and bubbles were still appearing at the decorating temperatures.

    The problem was complicated because we had to prove that the supplier caused a heavy loss that their insurance company should pay.

    I’ll not go into the details because they proved we were right and did pay.

    The reason for reimbursement was that I had requested them to never ship us material from a certain pit (mine). It had caused the company loses for years and I wanted no more of it.

    They shipped from that pit rather than shipping us the processed clay that I specified.

    Identification of impurities can be tricky without a Scanning Electron Microscope (SEM).

    Heavy liquids can be used, but that is a nuisance. Microscopes are good for those who know how to use them. You can look at the contaminants from the heavy liquid separation.

    Sometimes you must use an outside lab if you don’t have the correct equipment.

    To isolate a contaminant before you send samples out, elutriate clays and screen non clays.

    To elutriate a clay, take about ten pounds of clay and keep washing it down until only the contaminant is left. Put the contaminant in your body or glaze and reproduce the defect you are seeing in production.

    Chloride can be detected from salts by washing the clay with deionized water and testing with a soluble silver nitrate solution. A milky precipitate is silver chloride. Salts cause blisters!

    We had soy beans once in one of the plants I worked. The clay picked up the beans from a hopper car. They make big holes in your ware but they are easy to screen out if you have screening in your operation, which we didn’t!

    There is a funny story that goes with the soy beans but I don’t have room to tell it here. I’ll save that for another article.

    Particle Size

    One of the most serious formulating errors is in not controlling particle size in the batch recipe.

    For example, if you use too much of a certain clay having a very fine particle size, you will have problems. Let me say this, you must choose the correct particle size distribution for your process.

    Slip casting requires a coarser particle size distribution than a plastic forming process for the same formulation. What does all this nonsense mean? You must use some coarser grained clay(s) in your casting process. If you don't you will still be trying to cast a piece when the next millennium comes in.

    If you want to have control of your casting process, then use a coarse-grained kaolin plus a fine-grained kaolin, and a coarse-grained ball clay plus a fine-grained ball clay. Changing the ratio of fine to coarse clays will give you control. You must maintain the total amount of kaolin and the total amount of ball clay to preserve color of the product.

    Look at the particle size distribution of the clays you are using in your process. This information should be provided to you with each shipment.

    Look at the particle size portion that says <0.5 microns. (If that information is not there, the <2 m

    Die Cutting Equipment
    Several pieces of equipment are used for die cutting. There are three basic types of cutting equipment. The first is a small swing arm ‘clicker’ press that is ideal for embroidery shops. The second is a large ‘traveling head’ press, which is used for multiple cutting and roll cutting. ‘Full head’ press is the third type, and it is used for heavy-duty jobs. Additionally, ‘up-acting’ hydraulic platen presses are available for special applications such as cutting jigsaw puzzles, circuit boards and screen-printed material. Automatic die cutting equipment is excellent for cutting large-formats such as paper, labels, coupon books and plastic membership cards.Other types of die cutting equipment includes clicker punch presses, both automatic and manual roll feed and beam presses. A trained professional is required to select the right die cutting equipment for the right job. For simultaneous scoring and die cutting, low-cost steel-rule dies are used. Hollow die cutting equipment is perfect to create small-format items such as labels that do not require scoring and embossing. For efficient running, this equipment needs expensive solid-metal dies made o
    wo different plants.

    In one plant we had blisters in our decorated ware, the worst possible condition.

    The other factory using the same clay didn’t. Why? The bisk temperature was much higher in the not affected plant. The contaminant, a manganese compound, decomposed before glazing and decoration.

    The affected plant had both lower bisk and glost temperatures. The material did not fully decompose at these temperatures and bubbles were still appearing at the decorating temperatures.

    The problem was complicated because we had to prove that the supplier caused a heavy loss that their insurance company should pay.

    I’ll not go into the details because they proved we were right and did pay.

    The reason for reimbursement was that I had requested them to never ship us material from a certain pit (mine). It had caused the company loses for years and I wanted no more of it.

    They shipped from that pit rather than shipping us the processed clay that I specified.

    Identification of impurities can be tricky without a Scanning Electron Microscope (SEM).

    Heavy liquids can be used, but that is a nuisance. Microscopes are good for those who know how to use them. You can look at the contaminants from the heavy liquid separation.

    Sometimes you must use an outside lab if you don’t have the correct equipment.

    To isolate a contaminant before you send samples out, elutriate clays and screen non clays.

    To elutriate a clay, take about ten pounds of clay and keep washing it down until only the contaminant is left. Put the contaminant in your body or glaze and reproduce the defect you are seeing in production.

    Chloride can be detected from salts by washing the clay with deionized water and testing with a soluble silver nitrate solution. A milky precipitate is silver chloride. Salts cause blisters!

    We had soy beans once in one of the plants I worked. The clay picked up the beans from a hopper car. They make big holes in your ware but they are easy to screen out if you have screening in your operation, which we didn’t!

    There is a funny story that goes with the soy beans but I don’t have room to tell it here. I’ll save that for another article.

    Particle Size

    One of the most serious formulating errors is in not controlling particle size in the batch recipe.

    For example, if you use too much of a certain clay having a very fine particle size, you will have problems. Let me say this, you must choose the correct particle size distribution for your process.

    Slip casting requires a coarser particle size distribution than a plastic forming process for the same formulation. What does all this nonsense mean? You must use some coarser grained clay(s) in your casting process. If you don't you will still be trying to cast a piece when the next millennium comes in.

    If you want to have control of your casting process, then use a coarse-grained kaolin plus a fine-grained kaolin, and a coarse-grained ball clay plus a fine-grained ball clay. Changing the ratio of fine to coarse clays will give you control. You must maintain the total amount of kaolin and the total amount of ball clay to preserve color of the product.

    Look at the particle size distribution of the clays you are using in your process. This information should be provided to you with each shipment.

    Look at the particle size portion that says <0.5 microns. (If that information is not there, the <2 m

    MS Connectors
    The MIL-C-5015 MS circular connectors have been around the longest, and are often referred to as MS Connectors. MS connectors needs no tools for coupling and assembling of the connectors when attaching cables to equipment. MS connecor can be coupled by inserting the coupling nut of barrel into the receptacle and turning to the screw direction.These MS connectors are designed for use in fixed or mobile military equipment, industrial machine tools, robotics and automation, trucks, buses, ships aircraft etc.Jetronics India, established as Manufacturers of Ms Connectors in 1985, has grown into a leading producer and exporter of MS connectors, MIL C 5015 grade electrical connectors and related accessories like MG Connectors, Circular Threaded Coupling Connectors, MS 25042 connectors, MS 25043 connectors, Reverse Bayonet connectors, 121B connectors, Military connectors, MIL 5015 connectors, VG 95234 connectors, Military connectors.Originally designed as military connector, current applications widely centre on industrial uses.Circular Threaded Coupling connectors These connectors are thread coupled and are in conformity to operati
    water and testing with a soluble silver nitrate solution. A milky precipitate is silver chloride. Salts cause blisters!

    We had soy beans once in one of the plants I worked. The clay picked up the beans from a hopper car. They make big holes in your ware but they are easy to screen out if you have screening in your operation, which we didn’t!

    There is a funny story that goes with the soy beans but I don’t have room to tell it here. I’ll save that for another article.

    Particle Size

    One of the most serious formulating errors is in not controlling particle size in the batch recipe.

    For example, if you use too much of a certain clay having a very fine particle size, you will have problems. Let me say this, you must choose the correct particle size distribution for your process.

    Slip casting requires a coarser particle size distribution than a plastic forming process for the same formulation. What does all this nonsense mean? You must use some coarser grained clay(s) in your casting process. If you don't you will still be trying to cast a piece when the next millennium comes in.

    If you want to have control of your casting process, then use a coarse-grained kaolin plus a fine-grained kaolin, and a coarse-grained ball clay plus a fine-grained ball clay. Changing the ratio of fine to coarse clays will give you control. You must maintain the total amount of kaolin and the total amount of ball clay to preserve color of the product.

    Look at the particle size distribution of the clays you are using in your process. This information should be provided to you with each shipment.

    Look at the particle size portion that says <0.5 microns. (If that information is not there, the <2 micron information usually is. Use it but it is not as good for control.)

    The <0.5 microns is called the colloidal fraction. Keep the colloidal fraction the same in each casting batch. (Send me an email if you can’t figure out how to do this. Hint: if you have 30% Clay A in your batch and the colloidal fraction of the clay is 20%, the colloidal fraction added to the batch is 6%.)

    You control your shrinkage by controlling particle size (and water content). Too fine a formulation will cause excessive shrinkage and you will get distortion and cracking problems.

    HTTP = HTML link (for blogs, profiles,phorums):
    <a href="http://www.added4u.com/article/4184/added4u-Ceramic-and-Pottery-Defects-2-Defects-from-Raw-Materials-and-Batching-Errors.html">Ceramic and Pottery Defects 2: Defects from Raw Materials and Batching Errors</a>

    BB link (for phorums):
    [url=http://www.added4u.com/article/4184/added4u-Ceramic-and-Pottery-Defects-2-Defects-from-Raw-Materials-and-Batching-Errors.html]Ceramic and Pottery Defects 2: Defects from Raw Materials and Batching Errors[/url]

    Related Articles:

    Holiday Season Sales Predictions For 2006

    Shipping Cases

    Chinese Calligraphy

    Bookmark it: del.icio.us digg.com reddit.com netvouz.com google.com yahoo.com technorati.com furl.net bloglines.com socialdust.com ma.gnolia.com newsvine.com slashdot.org simpy.com shadows.com blinklist.com