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Make a useless Amazon mixer useful with a 3D printed propeller

The original was on a short shaft and had no propeller, just a weird flapper. It was only able to mix about half a gallon. It's stepper motor had a totally inadequate top speed but it was powerful enough to turn a much larger propeller. This new large four-blade propeller was the answer. It can mix two gallons with no problem! There are more issues. This mixer rotates counter-clockwise, commercial blades are not available for that. Further, it has a 6mm (rather than 1/4 inch) shaft. Even if propellers were available they would likely cost hundreds of dollars. But designing and printing one on a home 3D printer is no problem. Look how well it works on this 1.45 specific gravity slurry.

Context: 3D printing a propeller.., Variable speed lab mixers..

Sunday 3rd November 2024

3D printed mold tests of embossed logo

3D printed embossed logo mold

We want to achieve embossed lettering inside the foot rings of slip-cast ceramic pieces by using a standard consumer 3D printer with PLA filament. There are plenty of obstacles to overcome in doing this. Since plaster does not release well at all from lettering having sharp corners, bevelling has to be done. However, our CAD software has problems rounding the corners of many fonts, I had to search for one having no variations in stroke width. Then it was a matter of discovering how much to extrude and how much bevelling it would tolerate - this one permits a 1 mm extrusion with a 0.6 radius bevel.
Left front: A 1mm extrude without bevelling and cold release produced very poor results.
Centre: 1mm extrude, 0.6 radius bevelling, 0.2mm rise of background to minimize verticals and cold release - better but still problems.
Right: Same as center but released with heat gun - almost perfect.
Bottom: A test casting from the first prototype mold - looking really good (albeit backwards!).

Context: 2 19 Jiggering-Casting Project..

Thursday 31st October 2024

Milk-as-a-glaze goes on more evenly by sponge

Milk glazed mugs

The milk was applied to inside-glazed L210 terracotta ware (fired to cone 06) that I had preheated to 250F. This has not gone on as thick as usual so it appears it might be best to dip the pieces into milk and then pat them with a milk-damp sponge to break all the bubbles, remove the drips and even out the coverage.

Since these are glazed only on the inside I had to be cautious to avoid glaze compression issues. And tell users not to put these in the dishwasher (or if they do tell them how to restore the surface in their own oven).

Context: This crack is spring.., Milk as a glaze.., Using milk as a..

Wednesday 30th October 2024

Does manganese dioxide produce metal fumes at cone 6?

Clay colored using black stain

Black-burning clay bodies really enhance certain glazes. These two are examples: G3933B vs G3933D (similar to G3933E and G3933EF). However, these bodies are somewhat controversial. Some clay manufacturers are adding raw manganese - based on a belief that manganese dioxide (MnO2) does not decompose to produce metal fumes at cone 6. However, ChatGPT (see below) does not currently agree with this. As much as 10% MnO2 is needed to get color as dark as these samples. A kiln load of 50lb of pottery would have 5lb of MnO2! Other manufacturers use umber, reducing the impact 5-fold or more. However, this clay body, L4449J, adds 6% Mason 6666 black stain to Plainsman PR3D raw clay (+bentonite for plasticity). The result is a remarkably black clay body having no fume worries (which also means no glaze blistering). Is the extra cost and trouble of mixing this yourself is worth it? Maybe not. But there is a viable option: Slip casting. Black stain can be added to any clay body that can be deflocculated. And, ware is light so the cost might well be acceptable.

Context: Manganese compounds may begin..

Tuesday 29th October 2024

3D printed three-piece jigger case mold complete

3D printed jigger case mold

It is now practical to make true-round, perfect-fitting, all-in-one case molds for jiggering using a consumer 3D printer and PLA filament. This is a one-off test mold using a consumer printer, but the method is so fast that production molds on an industrial printer are feasible. The process is: Create the drawing in 3D CAD (e.g. Fusion 360), print the three sections, glue them, turn the assembled shell upside down, fill with plaster, let it set and peel out the inside two pieces using a heat gun.

Things to note:
-This is very light, the walls are only 0.8mm thick.
-The shoulder (C) is printed solid and the PLA printed surface from A to D is left in place permanently, this enables precise and durable fit into the cuphead. I print the outside shell upside down, no printed support is needed and it prints very quickly.
-The down-pointing flange (A) embeds it into the plaster providing a durable edge against which to fit the pour spout (F). The glue joint connecting A & B breaks when B & E are removed.
-B and E are printed upside down, no support is needed for B, since the top is open, it thus prints quickly.
-The base E has a flange that enables gluing it precisely into B. It has a debossed logo and prints upside down for maximum quality (print support is generated but because it is short it prints quickly).

If you would like this 3D file in Fusion 360 format, it is available in the Files manager in your Insight-live.com account (click the link below to go straight there).

Context: 3D render for a.., Fusion 36 drawing of.., 3D-Printing, All-in-one case mold, 2 19 Jiggering-Casting Project..

Monday 28th October 2024

Sanity checking a cone 6 purple pottery glaze

A purple pottery glaze that shivers

A customer was having serious trouble with this cone 6 glaze recipe shivering. A quick check of its chemistry reveals the reason: It has the lowest calculated thermal expansion we have ever seen! The reason is the high spodumene and talc levels. Adding the 3% cobalt also makes this among the most expensive we have seen. To say this recipe looks non-typical is an understatement. And, it raises flags on working properties and susceptibility to leaching in both limit recipes (e.g. very low clay content, high talc and spodumene) and limit formulas (stratospheric levels of Li2O and MgO coupled with plenty of cobalt).

The hard panning problem can be fixed easily: Supply the same amount of Li2O from lithium carbonate (only 10% is needed so the overall recipe cost is reduced), that makes room in the recipe for clay (to supply the lost Al2O3 and SiO2 from the spodumene). Second, introduce KNaO at the expense of MgO and Li2O, that will greatly increase the thermal expansion and reduce or stop the shivering.

Context: Limit Recipe, GLC

Monday 21st October 2024

Here is why you don't want an engobe to fire too vitreous

An over mature engobe is not opaque

Too much frit in an engobe and it will lose opacity and whiteness. The white slip on the left is an adjustment to the popular "Fish Sauce" slip recipe (L3685A: 8% Frit 3110 replaces 8% Pyrax to make it harder and fire-bond to the body better). The one on the right, L3685C, has 15% frit. Although applied at the same thickness, it is becoming translucent, moving it into glaze territory. That means it will have a far higher firing shrinkage than the body (a common cause of shivering at lips and contour changes). This slip is basically a very plastic white body. Since white burning slips are made from refractory materials they are not nearly as vitreous as red ones, at low fire they need help to mature and a frit is the natural answer. With the right amount of frit the fired shrinkage of body and slip can be matched and the slip will be opaque. This underscores the need to tune the maturity of an engobe to the body and temperature. Although zircon could be added to the one on the right to opacify and whiten it, that would not fix the mismatch in fired shrinkage between it and the body. And it would increase the price.

Context: L3685U, Creating a Non-Glaze Ceramic.., Bi-Clay strips test compatibility.., Potters can learn from.., Applying an engobe by.., Here is motivation to.., Engobe, Opacity

Saturday 19th October 2024

A method to make a two-part slip casting mold in one pour

Complete case mold done in one pour of plaster

This is part of a project to create a new mold. I have to make various iterations to arrive at a final design where rubber will be used to make the case mold. But until then I will 3D print the case mold directly. Here are some features that make this super cool:
-The center section is the jug being cast (two pour spouts will be glued on). It is hollow and will be split horizontally in the slicer so the two halves can be printed with open side up and then glued together (with the aid of printed inner hoops to align them).
-The mold seams, where the two halves mate, is printed as a 0.4mm membrane connected to the model and running vertically down its center.
-The membrane has 9.4mm holes for the insertion of standard mold natch pairs. During plaster pour the membrane will flex somewhat, this will be a benefit to aligning the halves.
-The outer shell halves have no angles steeper than 45 degrees and thus print without printed supports. The flanges were drawn using our rotation technique (see link below).
-The round flat base will be glued onto the bottom disk.
-Any rough surface sections of the model (printed on top of support), will be coated with a fluid epoxy to smooth them.
-A separate handle mold will be made.

Context: How to 3D-design a.., 2 19 Jiggering-Casting Project.., All-in-one case mold, Medalta Ball Pitcher Slip..

Saturday 19th October 2024

Here is what happens when a glaze has too much raw clay

A high clay glaze is cracking

This is an example of how a glaze that contains too much plastic clay has been applied too thick. It shrinks and cracks during drying and is guaranteed to crawl. This is raw Alberta Slip. To solve this problem you need to tune a mix of raw and roasted clay. Enough raw clay is needed to suspend the slurry and dry it to a hard surface, but enough calcine is needed to keep the shrinkage low enough that this cracking does not happen. Perhaps you have been using a glaze having a high percentage of clay and this does not happen - the reason is likely that the clay is not highly plastic.

Context: Alberta Slip, Alberta Slip 19 F.., G2934 cone 6 matte.., Crawling, Glaze Shrinkage, Glaze thickness, Subsitute Gerstley Borate in.., Powdering Cracking and Settling..

Monday 14th October 2024

The difference lighting can make in photos

Tenmoku piece in sunlight and fluorescent light

This is the same reduction fired tenmoku piece in sunlight and a fluorescent flood lamp. The picture was taken by an iPhone and then cropped to a white background using the path tool in Photoshop. The whole mug is glazed with GA10-B. The inside and upper outside of the leather hard piece was engobed using L3954N.

Context: Cutting out the background.., Metallic black effect at.., Bit Image

Monday 14th October 2024

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What people have said about Digitalfire

  • I, personally, think Digital Fire's contribution to potters, and the Ceramic industry as a whole, is absolutely awesome, and I thank the gods there are people like you who have the knowledge and energy to provide us simple artist/educators with such exceptional tools.
  • I Just wanted to say thank you for all of your research! every question i ask google about ceramics ... POP there is your artical with the answer. !
  • Go look at Tony Hansens page and look at Insite. Incredible amounts of information. He has a great explanation of .. Shivering ---and the opposite----- Crazing. Cause and solution.
  • I used Boraq 3 as I wanted the layered action and for the first time, I GOT IT. Thrilled is an understatement. I used the boraq 3 formula in the floating blue receipe and it's wonderful!!!!! My 2000 gram test was encouraging and the 4500 gram test looks great. I've glazed only a few test pieces with larger ones going in later this week. Right now I am one happy campette.
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