Use some glasses to stare at the orange glow, the ones that filter that light or hurt your eyes on the long run. I did Raku glaze on pre bisqued pieces and that worked really well
The glass plate was getting warm because it was also absorbing the microwave radiation, not because of the kiln transferring heat to it via conduction. If you remove the plate when using the microwave, it will be even more efficient since all of the microwave radiation will get absorbed by the heating medium (SiC) that covers the inner walls of the kiln.
Yes, thats right. I have seen it on an other Video. The Glass Plate getting hot and absorbing the Microwaves. More Microwaves -> more hotter the Plate -> absorbing more Microwaves.....
Bigger the kiln longer the cook. You could try removing the glass turntable and the wee plastic triangle inside then use kiln shelf support that way your objects are more stable
Hello! Thank you for the video :) I'm writing with a translator, sorry for mistakes. How many waats does your micro wave have? And what was the separator? Could it be bisqit too?
Hello. I am interested in microwave kilns for scientific/lab purposes. I don't know much about how the cone system works, but it seems like the kiln had to get up to 1915 or 1945 F to melt that clay, right? Or is there more to it? Thanks!
Hi Kenneth, Cones are a measure of temperature over time and are used to judge the "heat work" (basically has everything melted appropriately). So they are not giving us a exact temp. The cones are made of the same materials that our clay and glazes are made of and if the cone bends then it is a good indicator that our ceramic pieces have gone threw the appropriate amount of heat work. 1850 to 1950F is a good guess but cones are not meant to judge only temperature. I hope this is helpful.
@@laurahaight2660 Thanks! The reason I ask is that other sites say that microwave kilns can reach only 800-899C. Melting a cone 04 would significantly surpass that at around 1000C+! That evidence is really useful, as these kilns seem less studied and are harder to study, as getting measurement equipment in a microwave is tough ...
the moment I saw the idea of the cone, I decided I thought it was brilliant
Use some glasses to stare at the orange glow, the ones that filter that light or hurt your eyes on the long run. I did Raku glaze on pre bisqued pieces and that worked really well
The glass plate was getting warm because it was also absorbing the microwave radiation, not because of the kiln transferring heat to it via conduction. If you remove the plate when using the microwave, it will be even more efficient since all of the microwave radiation will get absorbed by the heating medium (SiC) that covers the inner walls of the kiln.
Yes, thats right. I have seen it on an other Video. The Glass Plate getting hot and absorbing the Microwaves. More Microwaves -> more hotter the Plate -> absorbing more Microwaves.....
@@Schattenmeister when I tried this it heated up just one spot on the inner wall of the kiln, not good!
Bigger the kiln longer the cook. You could try removing the glass turntable and the wee plastic triangle inside then use kiln shelf support that way your objects are more stable
Very very cool. Thanks for this video. Might have to try this!!!
Did you ever make a video of firing clay in this kiln?
Sure glad you put the gloves on sister😜
Hello! Very helpful video. Also, what size is the kiln that you're using?
Did you try bisque firing with it? Can you post some videos where you use real pieces for firing.
Am I missing something or did the "real stuff" video never got made?
This is so cool! What would you realistically use a microwave kiln for?
Glaze tests and small work like Jewlery
Can you link where you purchased thjis? @@laurahaight2660
Or glass fusing, and silver clay
What temperature is the kiln? I have a 700 will that work
What size ?
What is the wattage of your microwave on high setting?
Neat! How many watts does your microwave have/at how many watts are you firing?
Hello! Thank you for the video :) I'm writing with a translator, sorry for mistakes. How many waats does your micro wave have? And what was the separator? Could it be bisqit too?
Hello. I am interested in microwave kilns for scientific/lab purposes. I don't know much about how the cone system works, but it seems like the kiln had to get up to 1915 or 1945 F to melt that clay, right? Or is there more to it? Thanks!
Hi Kenneth, Cones are a measure of temperature over time and are used to judge the "heat work" (basically has everything melted appropriately). So they are not giving us a exact temp. The cones are made of the same materials that our clay and glazes are made of and if the cone bends then it is a good indicator that our ceramic pieces have gone threw the appropriate amount of heat work. 1850 to 1950F is a good guess but cones are not meant to judge only temperature. I hope this is helpful.
@@laurahaight2660 Thanks! The reason I ask is that other sites say that microwave kilns can reach only 800-899C. Melting a cone 04 would significantly surpass that at around 1000C+! That evidence is really useful, as these kilns seem less studied and are harder to study, as getting measurement equipment in a microwave is tough ...
To get those high temps you would need to insulate
Watch this at 1.5X speed!
I guess you weren’t in a spelling bee in school