Crystal Clear Transparent Reichenbach 096 Frit RW 201
- Description
- Working Notes
- Firing Schedule
-
This is coe096 and can be used with System96 glass. This is a lead-free crystal clear frit.
Available in Powder or Fine grade.
The technical specifications are not subject to a guarantee. Please test each product for the respective intended purpose. All colour images are taken from Reichenbach's website and are considered approximations.
-
Clear Reichenbach powder—or any clear glass powder—can turn white, milky, or cloudy after fusing for a few reasons.
1. Micro-bubbles trapped between the tiny particles
When you sift or layer clear powder, the tiny grains trap a LOT of air.
When it fires, that air expands and forms micro-bubbles, creating the appearance of:
· White haze
· Frostiness
· Cloudy or devitrified look
This is the number one reason clear powders look white.
The more powder you use, the whiter it looks
2. High surface-area = higher risk of devitrification
Powder has the highest surface area of any glass form, which means:
· It picks up contaminants easily (even from the air)
· It encourages crystal formation on the surface
· It devitrifies more easily than frit, sheet, or rod
Devit looks exactly like a white matte scum layer. -
Over-firing or holding too long near 700–750°C
Reichenbach and the other 96 COE clears can devitrify if exposed too long to:
· 680–760°C (slow ramps, long soaks)
· Heatwork from multiple firings
Tack fuses are actually riskier than full fuses because the glass spends longer in the danger zone
What can you do to prevent the white haze
A. Use less powder
Thin, even dusting instead of a thick layer.
Thick powder layers always look white.
B. Cap the clear powder
If you need true optical clear, powder under a cap sheet gives vastly better clarity
C. Fire hotter + shorter
A schedule like this helps:
149°C/hr to 675°C – no hold
333°C/hr to 805°C – hold 10 minutes
Full to 482°C – hold 60 minutes
83°C/hr to 371°C – off
Higher top temp + fast heating decreases devit.
D. Consider switching to frit
Clear frit (#1 or #2) stays clear.