This is the correct term for normal glass. Where old-fashioned plate glass was
manufactured by rolling it out and polishing it, float glass is produced by
floating molten glass on liquid tin which produces a flat surface with no
imperfections.
Float
glass is usually made in thickness
of 3mm to 6mm (⅛in to ¼in)
Low-e glass
This glass allows heat from sunlight to pass into a room
but prevents heat then being lost in the opposite direction. This is due
to an invisibly thin layer of metallic film on the inner pane of glass which
only allows certain wavelengths of UV rays to pass through, while still
allowing all the light to flood in.
Toughened Glass
Or tempered glass, is normal glass that has been baked to become about five times stronger
than float glass. This means it cannot be cut; any shaping, trimming or
fixing holes must therefore be cut into the glass before it is hardened.
Instead
of breaking into dangerous shards, toughened
glass shatters into less dangerous small, blunt lumps.
Toughened
glass may be used as safety glass if it meets British Standard 6206.
Laminated Glass
Laminated glass made of a bonded sandwich
of tear-resistant, clear plastic film surrounded by two layers of normal float
glass. If impacted, the window will break but
the film in the middle prevents it from collapsing, and can therefore provide
stronger security to your home.
This
glass also prevents sunlight from
bleaching carpet and upholstery.
· Laminated glass is most commonly available 6.5mm (¼in) thick.
Laminated
glass may be used as safety glass if it meets British Standard 6206
Fire-Resistant Glass
Made as laminated glass, or with steel wire mesh embedded, this glass might crack, but will not collapse
and can therefore prevent the spread of smoke and flames. To meet this
classification the glass must be certified
as FRG30 and meet British Standard 476.
Self-cleaning Glass
Self cleaning glass does not permanently remove the need for
window cleaning, but will significantly reduce the frequency that
the job must be done. Self-cleaning glass is coated with a thin transparent
layer of titanium dioxide. First, this layer works as a ‘photocatalyst’ using
UV rays in daylight to break down organic dirt such as tree sap and
bird droppings. Then, because this layer is also water loving, or
‘hydrophilic’, rain water is spread evenly over the glass instead of forming
droplets, and runs off in a sheet that takes all the loosened dirt with it.
Obscured or patterned glass
particularly is normally used where privacy is required like a bathroom as it allows light to penetrate without permitting
your neighbours to see more than they bargained for when you step out of the
shower!
Hence textured glass gives privacy and style throughout the home and comes in five levels of privacy:
Obscured
glass comes in variety of forms using
colours, patterns, textures and translucence to distort a clear view through
the window.
It's also
possible to purchase self-adhesive
window films that can be applied to a window to give it a frosted
and/or patterned appearance.
Solar-Control Glass
Solar-control glass is coated
with a tinted, reflective film that
controls the amount of heat gained from the sun. In reducing the amount of
glare, these windows also reduce the level of illumination.
Electro chromic Glass
This includes a layer of tungsten oxide that
changes colour when an electric current is passed through it. This kind
of glass must therefore be wired up to an electricity supply so that you can
choose the amount of light that is allowed to permeate the window, from
completely transparent to totally opaque.
·t This glass can therefore be used to shade out sunlight or
ensure privacy.
Argon-filled Glazing
This is
not strictly a type of glass. Argon is a natural, colourless, inert, non-toxic
gas which improves the thermal
efficiency of a window when it fills the air gap in between the double glazing.
An even greater improvement can be achieved using the similar, but more
expensive, krypton gas.
Divided & Simulated Lights
Where a large window is divided into smaller ‘lights’, this can be done in two ways. The most
expensive method uses truly separate, individual panes of glass, each of which
is held in its own frame.
The
advantage here is that a small
pane can be replaced in the event of a breakage.
The cheaper approach uses one large pane of glass on
to which imitation glazing bars are adhered.