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Discuss technical talk.......... in the Canada Tile Advice area at TilersForums.com.

F

Flintstone

Whatever process they do to finish the edge of the tile, may add tension and with it being such a thin cut, that tension is pulling it to bend
 
I

Italy

puff, I smoke coming out from the brain ;(
something I discovered,
the tension in the porcelain,
it is formed during the cooling of the tile,
when it comes out of the ovens. (cooling too fast).
this does not happen in thin porcelain.
because the cooling is done more slowly.

this should be the reason,
but at the first opportunity, I addressed the problem
with a smarter person than me. haha
 
O

One Day

It is caused by temperature differences in cooling.
Best way to illustrate it, samurai swords are curved but the curve is made by painting one side of the steel with clay. Then the steel is heated. It's still straight at this stage. But when the hot steel is immersed in water, the different rate of cooling creates the gentle curve.
So it's down to lazy production really.
Not all porcelain does it, but when it does, it's a pain.
I imagine it matters very little to the factory, but it matters to us!

Incidentally, there's no sand used in porcelain whoever said that?!
 
Q

Qwerty

Incidentally, there's no sand used in porcelain whoever said that?!

I said that. I have always been told by tile manufacturers that sand mixed with feldspar is used in the manufacturing process of porcelain. I visited the Yorkshire Tile Company years ago and they told me exactly that, and their website still states it....

20171104_163204.png


It's also widely advertised by multinational porcelain manufacturers as in this YouTube video by Everstone (1min 20secs in)....

 

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