Float glass is a sheet of glass made by floating molten glass on a bed of molten metal typically tin although lead and other various low melting point alloys were used in the past.
Float glass is a sheet material used in windows.
Clear float glasses are highly popular in the construction of architectural exteriors and interiors of the building.
This method gives the sheet uniform thickness and very flat surfaces.
The thickness is determined by the speed at which the solidifying glass is taken off the bath.
Float glass is essentially a super smooth distortion free glass which is used for designing other glass items such as laminated glass heat toughened glass and so on.
However the float process which is very efficient now dominates the market for certain thin flat glass products that used to be made using the sheet process.
There is little room left to wonder at how easy it overtook plate glass as the favored material to use in new construction.
It also has fewer irregularities.
Float glass can be toughened a process that creates safety glass out of annealed glass.
The float glass process is.
Used in mirrors windows curtain walls and doors.
For modern architectural and automotive applications the flat glass is sometimes bent after production of the plane sheet.
Most float glass is soda lime glass although relatively minor quantities of specialty borosilicate and flat panel display glass are also produced using the float glass process.
Float glass is less expensive to produce than machine made plate glass.
Residential windows desk tops picture frames and so forth were typically made with sheet glass.
With a natural greenish hue and translucent nature it is capable of transmitting about 87 of the incident light and unlike sheet glass float glass provides users with a.
Float glass is the most commonly used in glass windows.
It has wide application in residential structures.
It floats on the surface hence the name and spreads out to form a level uniform surface.
Plate glass flat glass or sheet glass is a type of glass initially produced in plane form commonly used for windows glass doors transparent walls and windscreens.
Float glass is the most widely used form of glass today and is produced by a process of floating molten glass on a bed of molten metal usually molten tin.
It is sometimes also called window glass.