Abstract: An electric heater plate is disclosed comprising a sheet of tempered glass with a metallized aluminum circuit extending over the face thereof for carrying an electrical heating current. At the terminals of the metallized aluminum circuit there is provided a terminal area of silver between the glass and the metallized aluminum coating, which silver terminals are each exposed through a small opening in the metallized aluminum coating such that lead wires may be soldered to the silver through said openings.
Abstract: A float or plate glass spandrel, preferably heat strengthened, coated with a thin film of metal has secured thereto on the metallic side thereof an insulation board. A barrier material such as a paint coating and a cotton muslin is interposed between the metallic coating and the insulation board to prevent "show through" of the insulation board and to insure adequate bonding.
Abstract: A method is disclosed for producing intricate metal designs bonded to glass such as required in electrical resistance heating circuits, microwave oven panel shields and the like. The method includes the application to a sheet of glass of the negative of the desired design by silk screening or other screening techniques utilizing a screenable pasting agent which screens through the negative pattern and adheres temporarily to the glass. The entire sheet of glass is then coated with the desired metal, usually aluminum, according to known metallizing techniques in which flame-atomized metal is applied to the heated glass sheet and thus bonds thereto. The metallized surface is then brushed with wire rotary brushes which remove the metal from those areas where the screenable pasting agent has been applied. After washing, further wet brushing, rinsing and drying, the positive desired design in metal remains securely bonded to the glass.
Abstract: A stack of flat glass sheets standing on edge in a vertical position are supported laterally by padded adjustable jack screws extending inwardly from the vertical lateral walls of a container such as a railcar, truck, trailer, or the like.
Abstract: By the addition of a small quantity of potassium chloride or arsenous sulfide to commercial grades of molten potassium nitrate, the potassium nitrate may be activated or purified sufficiently to produce strengthened glass by ion exchange equal to glass strengthened by use of highly purified laboratory reagent grades of potassium nitrate.