ChatterBank6 mins ago
Glass is never solid.
i heard that glass is not a solid and a pane of glass will be thicker at the bottem than to top after x amount of years. Is this true?
ta
ta
Answers
Best Answer
No best answer has yet been selected by Toleman. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.
-- answer removed --
Happy to be corrected. Sounds as though the bent tubing was the result of solid plasticity under (constant) stress rather than (fluid) flow.
The crown glass process will always produce glass of uneven thickness or with ripples etc. What I would find surprising is if mediaeval glass was always used with the thinnest portion uppermost. That may have been a convention but it's unlikely that no one ever made a mistake. So for all the examples of glass thicker at the bottom there should be some where it's thicker on one side or at the top.
The crown glass process will always produce glass of uneven thickness or with ripples etc. What I would find surprising is if mediaeval glass was always used with the thinnest portion uppermost. That may have been a convention but it's unlikely that no one ever made a mistake. So for all the examples of glass thicker at the bottom there should be some where it's thicker on one side or at the top.
-- answer removed --