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Now, while you might be a better person for understanding the principle
behind making a score, you're not really any closer to finding out why we want
you to use kerosene. After all, why put oil (which kerosene is) on glass that's
already clean? This means we'll have to clean the glass before copper foiling
people whine. Oh, the horror. Hey, if we analyze the purpose of a lubricant we
could theoretically use any liquid (don't go there Ed). After all, it's the presence of
a liquid that's important, not the type. Sounds kind of like Deja Moo- the feeling
that you've heard this bull before.
But why kerosene? Let me illustrate the ways;
1) Well, most importantly it is a liquid.
2) It "facilitates the smoothest penetration of the glass surface, keeping
microscopic chipping to a minimum" according to the experts.
3) It's cheap and widely available. At Fantasy In Glass it even comes in a cute
little Noxzema blue glass bottle with enclosed dropper
4) Its oil base protects cutters from corrosion unlike many of the synthetic cutter
lubricants that make unscrupulous retailers lots of money
5) It evaporates almost totally, leaving little residue
Let's expand a bit here and discuss the cutter wheel doing all the work.
The angle to which the wheel edge is ground is the hone angle. This is an
important factor in determining how well the wheel can have and then hold a
sharp point. Getting it right with steel is very difficult, as steel does not allow itself
to be well sharpened and then almost impossible to keep sharp. To compensate,
manufacturers steepen the hone angle to compensate for steel's weakness.
Stained glass cutters with steel wheels average 114o to 120o hone angle.
The ubiquitous Toyo Supercutter's tungsten carbide wheel uses a wide (135o) hone angle with a very sharp point.
Now what does all this highly technical talk about hone angles have to do
with cutting glass. Well, it seems that the difference in impact between a steel
wheeled (steeper angle- blunt point) cutter and a tungsten carbide (shallow
angle- sharp point) one is sort of like dancing with a 250 pound man in open toed
(but with wool socks) sandals or with a woman wearing an off the shoulder
chiffon red dress and matching stiletto heels. The pressure applied to the glass is
directly proportional to the amount of wheel touching the surface of the glass.
This is one of the reasons carbide wheels regularly outlast steel by 50-1.
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