Sand Rat
New member
Originally posted by Dragonsreach
Ok A thought occurs to me;
If Glass is a liquid how can we get Toughened, Laminated or even Bulletproof glass?
lol
Shear Factor. The same way you can walk on a liquid solution of cornstarch.
Originally posted by Dragonsreach
Ok A thought occurs to me;
If Glass is a liquid how can we get Toughened, Laminated or even Bulletproof glass?
lol
Originally posted by skeeve
Neither. Glass is the third state. From a casual observer point of view it is \"solid\" but on the molecular level glass doesn\'t have ordered microcrystalic structure.
Anyway, the linky is bellow
http://math.ucr.edu/home/baez/physics/General/Glass/glass.html
Originally posted by airheadIce has a crystaline structre as does every other solid.
Originally posted by Dragonsreach
Ok A thought occurs to me;
If Glass is a liquid how can we get Toughened, Laminated or even Bulletproof glass?
lol
Yes, the calcium in bone has a crystaline lattice.Originally posted by squidders
Originally posted by airhead
Ice has a crystaline structre as does every other solid.
Like Bone and wood - right? lol
Huh?Originally posted by squidders
Wood is just plain weird and is certainly not an organized structure at any level.
Yeah, but the hardwood/softwood thing is not about hardness, they\'re just unfortunate holdovers from the original origins of the termsOriginally posted by Shawn R. L.
Same for balsa wood....technically it\'s a hardwood....................right.lol
Originally posted by eastman
When assembling window panes using glass of unequal thickness, the thickest part is placed at the bottom to make it easier to assemble.