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Alternate Names: Frit KFG 4110, Frit DA4110
Description: Leadless high expansion high alkali frit, formerly Frit 3110
| Oxide | Analysis | Formula | Tolerance |
|---|---|---|---|
| CaO | 6.13% | 0.29 | |
| K2O | 2.54% | 0.07 | |
| Na2O | 15.31% | 0.64 | |
| B2O3 | 2.68% | 0.10 | |
| Al2O3 | 4.20% | 0.11 | |
| SiO2 | 69.15% | 3.00 | |
| Oxide Weight | 261.01 | ||
| Formula Weight | 261.01 | ||
Good for copper blues and manganese purples.
Very similar but not identical to Ferro Frit 3110.
The data sheet at Walker Ceramics 2015 shows a little less SiO2 than this one.
| Materials |
Frit
Frits are made by melting mixes of raw materials, quenching the melt in water, grinding the pebbles into a powder. Frits have chemistries raw materials cannot. |
| Materials |
Ferro Frit 3110
High sodium, high thermal expansion low boron frit. A super-feldspar in clay bodies. Melts a very low temperatures. |
| Materials |
Frit 1078
|
| Materials |
Keramikos Fritte 31.10
|
| Typecodes |
Frit
A frit is the powdered form a man-made glass. Frits are premelted, then ground to a glass. They have tightly controlled chemistries, they are available for glazes of all types. |
| Co-efficient of Linear Expansion | 8.50 |
|---|---|
| Frit Softening Point | 575C |
| Frit Melting Range (C) | 1000-1060C |
| Glass Transition Temperature | 531C |
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