Can glass be “threaded”?

Mr. Me2

Well-Known Member
To all glass workers out there - Is it possible to create a glass stem that is in 2 pieces? And that one connects to the other by screwing them together?

If so (hopefully), could one piece also be designed as the oven with a permanent screen (preferably of glass). The other piece that screws on would have its own screen to serve as a lid.

Doable?
 

Mr. Me2

Well-Known Member
Another good idea! All depends on fit, I guess.

I still don’t want to give up on the stem design (which is fully integrated) just yet. It can probably be done with other materials, but I’m curious if it can be done in glass.
 
Mr. Me2,
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Mr. Me2

Well-Known Member
And I was thinking about safety, taste, and uniformity of diameter.
 
Mr. Me2,

Delta3DStudios

Well-Known Member
Accessory Maker
It's possible to create threads on glass, however this is not very practical for a variety of reasons including the inability to fully compensate for dimensions due to the unpredictability in shrink/contraction once baked in a kiln.

I've seen threads in glass, but they are typically polished and mate with a non-glass component via a loose fit.

That's why laboratory glass uses a tapered frosted glass fitting for mating glass - perfect air tight fit regardless of how much the glass might shrink during production/annealing.
 

Dan Morrison

Well-Known Member
Manufacturer
I looked into this a while ago. Lab glass is available with diamond cut precision threads. But a stem like you're describing would be very expensive. It would be a custom job in a very specialized industry. I wouldn't be surprised if it came to $100 a stem for small batch production.

The issue is mainly the wall thickness. A straight tube needs to experience a diameter change..or a change in wall thickness...to accomodate the cut thread, if you want to end up with the whole piece having the same OD the entire length. This adds a lampworking step to the manufacturing process.

A more practical solution would be to have two straight stems mated with a metal connector. Each end of the connector could be fitted with O-Rings that press on the ID of the glass tubes. It's just a snug press fit. Make one side fit more snug, so that it doesn't pop out when you separate the two halves.

hmmm.
 

Hippie Dickie

The Herbal Cube
Manufacturer
but I’m curious if it can be done in glass

there are threaded vials and test tubes that take a plastic cap - only a couple dollars each - so a threaded collar could couple two pieces together.

but, if it gets knocked over it will most likely break the glass ... i had one knock-over-glass-break 10 years ago and my design ever since has been for glass that falls away from the vape if dropped or knocked over, to try to minimize collateral damage to the glass heater tube.
 

Mr. Me2

Well-Known Member
I looked into this a while ago. Lab glass is available with diamond cut precision threads. But a stem like you're describing would be very expensive. It would be a custom job in a very specialized industry. I wouldn't be surprised if it came to $100 a stem for small batch production.

The issue is mainly the wall thickness. A straight tube needs to experience a diameter change..or a change in wall thickness...to accomodate the cut thread, if you want to end up with the whole piece having the same OD the entire length. This adds a lampworking step to the manufacturing process.

A more practical solution would be to have two straight stems mated with a metal connector. Each end of the connector could be fitted with O-Rings that press on the ID of the glass tubes. It's just a snug press fit. Make one side fit more snug, so that it doesn't pop out when you separate the two halves.

hmmm.
Can’t tell you how happy I am that you’re here and that this may have helped you.

After all, this thread was really started with you in mind...
 
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