I got the grabbers too, they're not bad.
Never gonna give you up, never gonna let you down. Never gonna run around, and desert you.
-Din
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A girl can dream, you know.
Honestly i know that sounds dumb but microwaves can safely be operated while opened, proven in the link i provided, and all parts that produce the "micro" "waves" can be taken out and used on whatever theyre being used on. I didnt write this so that people could criticize how I write things or talk. Discouraging people from thinking for themselves and being creative, trying to learn more about what they dont understand and putting it to good use, makes you a real shit of a person.
I have no idea why I take shitposts so srsly here, when I've been a 4chan lurker in my past.
Look at this, http:// http://www.wetcanvas.com/for...d.php?t=358343
do you think that'd be enough to dip a blowpipe into and catch enough glass or no? Well... i mean i could this same thing on a slightly larger scale in order to make it possible if it's not quite big enough for dipping and catching yet, at least the designer/creator says its his gloryhole
You could certainly try it, and Mark's come up with some crazy DIY stuff in the past that works great.
Most folks here will never tell you not to try something, providing you're not going to hurt yourself or others (mostly the latter). Go forth, prove us all wrong and sell us a working microwave crucible kiln.
The problem you're going to run into is the return on investment. For the amount of glass you might heat up with a residential microwave emitter (you did specify you wanted cheap, so I assumed you're hitting up a tag sale for a used POS microwave), you may as well just do it in the torch. Crucibles break down fast because molten glass is caustic, so you'll be replacing those pretty often.
If you really want to play, get a thick iron pot to use as a crucible and consider making an induction furnace. Overall it might be cheaper R&D and less likely to accidentally cook your genitals.
Never gonna give you up, never gonna let you down. Never gonna run around, and desert you.
This.... I really loved this whole idea of having a bench top dipper myself, but when it comes down to it in order to have a pot big enough to make it worth while (product vs waste etc)... I learned the actual crucible kiln is the cheap part of the whole thing... When some colors I would want to use are 80 to 100 $ a lbs and I would need 10 to 20 lbs... for one color/run well... I realized that the glass would cost near as much as the crucible itself.
Very good point. Well said. You could try making your own colour glass with a crucible and the right chemicals.
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