The first test piece of glass has been dropped in the kiln. The results are impressive with all things working as they should. The temperature, fall control, air pressure and chucking mechanism worked perfectly with only minor adjustments required for the next test tomorrow!
With the thermocouple reading around twelve hundred degrees Fahrenheit the temperature is just about right at the top of the kiln to start the glass moving. Temperature control will need to be further studied and regulated but works just fine for now. In the image below you can just make out the glass bubble coming down I didn't want to get to close its hot in there.
The chucking mechanism worked well holding the glass securely and allowing easy removal. The first one does not look to appealing but it was only a test and the fact that it even survived after the extremes we put to it is a testament in of itself. The next test scheduled for tomorrow will turn out better.
The vessel itself is about eighteen inches in diameter and almost four feet tall. Uneven heating do to the doors and lack of rotation caused some undesirable affects but should be easily fixed, Definitely a successful first run!
The wobble in the rotating chuck proved to not be tolerable even with the additional down force of the glass, this led me to develop and build a simple solution to hold us until the Iris s built. The kilns heating elements only line two thirds of the inside circumference of the kiln creating a hot and cold side, even a slow rotation will prevent problems but slow is a relative term and at even five RPM a big piece of molten glass is scary. The new clamping bearing system works around the existing setup and should hold the chuck drive pipe securely, allowing consistent rotation and maybe some playing with the glass!

I also built a set of big tongs so Randall could try to squeeze the glass since when we tried before we found even molten glass is really hard. The iris is the real solution to this shaping stuff but is also more complicated than everything combined to this point so it may take a while. While I build it maybe this will keep Randall entertained. Holes drilled in the working end of the tongs provides attachment points for different substances to work the glass.
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