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Breaking Laminated Glass | Glass.com® 4 года назад


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Breaking Laminated Glass | Glass.com®

WANT US TO MAKE MORE GLASS-BREAKING VIDEOS? HIT THAT LIKE BUTTON! Want more glass-related content? Click the subscribe button! Glass.com's Daniel Snow teams up with Dustin Anderson from Anderson Glass in Waco, TX to break laminated safety glass and find out how it differs from other types of glass such as tempered glass, mirror, or acrylic/plexiglass. Learn about the various uses for laminated glass, how it breaks, and how it protects. For more information on laminated vs. tempered glass, visit https://info.glass.com/laminated-vs-t... Transcription: Daniel: This is laminated glass. Dustin: This is laminated. So laminated is a type of safety glass. There's essentially three safety glasses. Tempered, laminated, and then an acrylic or plexiglass, which is kind of a plastic base. So what we have here is two pieces of glass that are laminated together with a film- an adhesive film. And essentially this is annealed, or plate glass, on both sides. Daniel: And so where would you find this? Dustin: So interesting fact: Almost everybody looks through this nearly every day because this is what your windshield is made out of. But also we use this in a lot of areas for storefront. If you see a gas station that has been broken into, sometimes this is what we put in to deter thieves from getting in. It's a lot harder to get into. We also use it in bullet-resistant glass. They laminate multiple pieces together. You'll find it sometimes in residential. And in those cases it's typically in a hurricane (prone) area where you have to have some blast type of glass. Daniel: Alright well let's take a shot at trying to break this and kind of demonstrate what that laminated interlayer does for the glass to keep it together. Dustin: For sure! Daniel: Wow! Dustin: So that's a great first shot. You can see where it broke from. Just like most glass, you can always see where it spiderwebs from and where it goes. That actually looks a lot like what your windshield looks like when a big rock hits it, right? Maybe not quite that extreme. But you can also tell that it's still intact. This piece of glass' integrity is there. Daniel: It's solid. Dustin: Correct. I mean, it's not going anywhere. It also is really not likely to cut you. All of these runs that you see... Daniel: It's pretty much totally smooth. Dustin: It's smooth! It's held together by the interlayer. So why don't you give it a couple more hits in the same spot so we can show just what it takes to literally get through this thing. So what you can see is the interlayer. You can see the plastic interior of the laminate piece. It actually holds together really really well. So what you've done is broken the glass away but the interlayer is still there. Daniel: Yea, so that'll deter theft, like you said, in a storefront. If you're in your automobile and this is your windshield then it's going to keep your windshield together while you're going down the road, or god forbid, if you hit the windshield. Dustin: So a cool piece of this is, all of this damage that you've done and this thing is still together. It hasn't come apart. It won't hurt you essentially. It could. But for the most part, this is what makes this a safety glass. Daniel: Yea, and that's extremely important for residents like in Florida where they have a lot of hurricanes; there's a lot of wind damage; storm damage. So if this was a window on your home, I think you'd be pretty safe during a hurricane. Dustin: For sure. You hear about windows blowing out all the time. This would be one of those windows that doesn't do it.

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