Tempered Glass Control Panel

What is Tempered Glass Control Panel

 

Tempered glass control panel is a type of safety glass processed by controlled thermal or chemical treatments to increase its strength compared with normal glass. Tempering puts the outer surfaces into compression and the interior into tension. Such stresses cause the glass, when broken, to shatter into small granular chunks instead of splintering into jagged shards as ordinary annealed glass does. The granular chunks are less likely to cause injury.

Benefits of Tempered Glass Control Panel
 

Durability
The thermal tempering process that tempered glass control panel undergoes makes it much stronger than ordinary glass. This material is resistant to most powerful winds, direct blows, and other minor forms of impact. For this reason, it is helpful for preventing storm damage.

 

Safety
Maintaining a safe household is incredibly important! One of the prime benefits of tempered glass control panel is that it is designed with safety in mind. It is difficult to break and has a slower cooling process during manufacturing.
Though it is still possible to break this type of glass, the slower cooling process allows it to shatter in a safer way. Ordinary windows break into large chunks with sharp edges. However, tempered glass breaks into smaller granular pieces. Even during an accident, it is less likely that family members will face serious injuries if this glass is stepped on.

 

High transparency
Even though this type of glass is tough, it is still crystal clear! Visually, tempered glass control panel are highly transparent. You can enjoy your view of the outdoors without dealing with intense glares or reflections.

 

Scratch-resistant
The thermal manufacturing process makes tempered glass hefty. It is resistant to scratching, which maintains the transparency and clarity of the glass. With tempered glass control panel, you don't need to worry about scuffs obstructing your outdoor view!

 

Multiple design options
Tempered glass control panel is strong, but it's design options make it the complete package! This glass can function the same whether it is frosted, stained, or patterned. Your windows
Can be personalized to the style of your home while remaining strong and safe!

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We prioritize the satisfaction of our clients and make sure their needs are met in a timely and effective manner.

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We constantly update our tools and technology to stay ahead of the competition and provide the best service possible.

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Tempered Glass Control Panels: What You Need to Know
 
01/

What is tempered glass?
Tempered glass control panel is about four times stronger than regular glass and has been treated with certain chemicals or processed using controlled thermal treatments to increase the strength of the glasses. Normal glass when it breaks splinters into jagged shards which can be incredibly dangerous. Tempered glass, on the other hand, breaks into small granular chunks which can help reduce the risk for more serious injury.

02/

Why use tempered glass control panels?
Tempered glass control panels can reduce injury if it should become broken. However, it can also offer protection against some weather conditions. Hail and wind (and tree branches in the wind) are two destructive forces of nature that put our homes through the wringer depending on the strength of the storm. However, with tempered glass and during most storms you don't have to worry about your windows breaking because of the strength of this type of glass.

03/

When do I need tempered glass panels?
Tempered glass control panels can be used in a few ways in your home. You can use tempered glass panels for security door inserts. However, in most cases, you will need tempered glass panels to help to enclose a porch or patio just for the season — allowing you to use your enclosed porch all year round. Tempered glass control panels allow for easy interchangeability of your screens and glass panels with swingover clips, also called casement clips, and each frame has a bubble strip on the back to help it seal tightly against the opening frame for an air-tight fit.

04/

Why seal up for the season?
It could be easy to want to just leave your screens up all year long. However, it is better to seal up your enclosure before cooler stormier weather comes to help you not only protect your screens but to also protect your space and allow you to enjoy your porch area all year long. Temporarily installing tempered glass panels ensures that your screens last for years to come and can protect your porch from water damage and extra wear and tear. Additionally, when you don't have to give up using this space, you can allow it to serve a more permanent purpose.

Types of Tempered Glass Control Panel
Black Screen Print Tempered Glass
2mm Smart Home Automation Tempered Glass Cover
4mm Touch Access Lock Glass
2mm Touch Access Lock Glass

Float glass – Float glass is created by passing molten glass onto a pool of molten tin, creating large, thin, flat panels. The resulting glass panels will be very smooth with a highly consistent thickness. Almost all window glass starts out as float glass before being treated further.

 

Annealed glass – Annealed glass is float glass that has been cooled slowly, in a controlled manner. The process of slowly cooling the glass reduces internal stressed within the sheet, making it stronger. Almost all float glass is annealed; this annealed glass is the starting point for further treatment. If it is not treated, annealed glass will break into large, sharp shards. For this reason, it is rarely used in buildings.

 

Heat strengthened glass – Heat strengthened glass starts out as a piece of annealed glass that is then reheated beyond the annealing point (1200 F) and cooled fairly rapidly. This cooling is not as rapid as it would be with tempered glass, meaning the compressive and tensile stresses won’t be quite equal across a section of glass. This results in glass that’s about twice as strong as annealed glass.
Heat strengthened glass will break into pieces smaller than annealed glass shards, but still sharp enough to cause injury. As a result, it’s rarely used in buildings unless laminated.

 

Fully tempered glass – Fully tempered glass is formed through a process that makes it four times stronger than annealed glass. First, the annealed glass has to be cut and finished to size (tempered glass cannot be cut). Next, it is heated past the annealing point (1200 F) and cooled rapidly enough that the internal portion of the glass remains fluid longer, forming equal tensile and compressive stresses across the glass. This makes it extremely strong, and the resulting glass pane, if broken, will shatter into small granular pieces, vastly reducing the risk of injury.
Tempered glass is commonly used as a safety glass where the glazing may need to be broken out of the frame during an emergency, for instance in car windows that may need to be broken in the event of an accident.

 

Heat soaked tempered glass – Heat soaking is a way to test tempered glass for unstable nickel sulfide inclusions, which can cause spontaneous breakage of the pane. Panes of glass are put into an oven and heated to a temperature around 550 F for a few hours. This causes any nickel sulfide inclusions to expand faster than the glass, causing it to break.
The idea behind heat soaked glass is to force unstable glass panes to fail in the plant before they fail in the field. This is hugely important for things like glass railings and other uses where the glass pane is critical for safety.

 

Laminated glass – Laminated glass, another safety glass, is made by fusing two or more layers of glass with inter-layers of a material called polyvinyl butyral (PVB) using heat and pressure.
If the laminated glass is made of heat strengthened glass, the PVB layers will hold the glass sheets together in the frame, so if they happen to shatter, shards of glass will stay in place and won’t fly everywhere. If it is made using tempered glass, the sheet may fall out of the frame but will still stay together.
Laminated glass is best used as a safety glass where the glazing must remain intact if the glass is broken, for instance in a car windshield – in the event that an object hits it, you don’t want the object passing through or the glass to shatter in the faces of the passengers. Laminated glass for home windows is primarily used in impact / hurricane resistant windows

 

Low-emissivity glass – Low-emissivity (Low-E) glass has a special coating that reflects infrared radiation (heat) while still allowing light from the visible spectrum to pass through. The benefits are two-fold: heat from the outside is kept out, reducing cooling load during the summer, and heat from the inside is kept in, preventing heat loss during the winter. Low-E glass is created by coating the glass in either tin oxide or silver.

Key Differences Between Heat Strengthened Glass VS Tempered Glass Control Panel
 

Production process
The production process for heat-strengthened and tempered glass control panel is largely the same. Glass sheets are heated to just below melting point, around 1,100°F, and then rapidly cooled to strengthen the glass. The difference lies in the speed of the cooling process. Tempered glass is cooled even more rapidly, which allows it to become even stronger.

 

Strength
Tempered glass control panel can be up to 5 times stronger than regular annealed glass. Heat-strengthened glass provides a strength increase of just 2 to 3 times. So if impact resistance and safety are top priorities, tempered glass is the better choice.

 

Breakage pattern
When broken, tempered glass control panel shatters into small granular chunks that are less likely to cause injury. Heat-strengthened glass breaks into larger, shard-like pieces that can still be dangerous. For applications where glass breakage could put people at risk, tempered glass is the safer option.

Professional Installation Tips For Tempered Glass Control Panels

 

 

Verify required glass type
Before committing to a glass product for your project's windows or glazing, it's crucial to verify that it aligns with your specifications—whether it's annealed, heat-strengthened, tempered, etc. Building requirements vary, so the right match guarantees optimal performance and safety. Take a moment to validate your choice, and you'll be on the right track to meet the unique needs of your window or glazing application.

 

Carefully inspect condition
Examine all tempered glass control panels before installation. Look for edge damage, surface scratches, delamination, or visible defects. Avoid using any compromised sheets.

 

Smooth clean cutting
Smooth, polished cut edges reduce stress accumulation zones. Manual scribing and breaking techniques should be used for something other than tempered glass. Clean mechanical cuts are a must.

 

Use non-serrated glazing blocks
Upgrade your framing experience by swapping those old hard rubber blocks with modern, non-serrated, ultra-soft alternatives. These gentle supports safeguard your glass surfaces, preventing potential damage when you set them into frames. It's a simple yet effective way to ensure your framed items stay pristine and protected.

 

Never grind or drill post-tempering
Any modification like grinding, drilling holes, edge shaping performed after tempering destroys the protective surface compression layer, causing instability and breakage.

 

Handle with care
Use clean gloves when handling tempered glass control panel. Pointed impacts on surfaces or edges cause trigger instability. Store panels vertically in padded racks to prevent leaning point loads.

6 Popular Uses of Tempered Glass Control Panel

Furniture

In furniture applications, tempered glass control panel is most commonly used in glass tabletops, providing high durability and resistance to wear and tear, such as scratches. Tempered glass tabletops can be found in both indoor dining room furniture and outdoor patio furniture, as well as conference room tables and office desks. Bookshelves and display cases also make use of tempered glass to form glass panels in the doors, shelves, and more.

Railings

Whether used in railings in the home — on balconies, for example — or in public settings, such as schools, shopping malls, and hospitals, tempered glass control panel is an ideal option. Its strength and durability provide ongoing protection against normal wear and tear without obstructing the view as opaque railings do.

Office

In the office, tempered glass can be used for office furniture such as desks and tables, as well as office partitions. For offices with an open floor plan, tempered glass is ideal for creating nonpermanent partitions. The glass is thick and durable enough to withstand daily wear and tear.

Displays

The display cases used in retail and grocery stores are often made of tempered glass. These displays are handled often by both employees and customers, so strength and durability are key. As another example, the retail display cases that hold electronics are often made of tempered glass.

Appliances

Tempered glass control panel can be found in numerous household appliances. Microwave ovens, baking ovens, toaster ovens, refrigerator shelves, and appliance control panels all use tempered glass in their various parts and components.

Sports

Tempered glass is often used in ice hockey and ice skating arenas to form a protective barrier between the stands and the rink. Panels made of tempered glass are less likely to break than traditional types, even when hit with a great deal of force. Plus, the material's high clarity makes it easy for spectators to watch the sports while eliminating the risk of injury by creating a solid barrier between the action on the rink and the spectators in the stands.

Company Advantages
 

Heyuan Hongwei Glass Co., Ltd. located in Heyuan City, the National High-tech Development Zone.The product is positioned in the high-end TV, monitor, home-used air conditioning, refrigerator and other household appliances related to glass products.The company has a 10000 square meters modern deep processing room ,with cutting and grinding integrated molding edge grinding machine, automatic inspection equipment, CNC machining center, continuous tempering furnace and other glass deep processing equipment,Ensure that the glass is cut, grinded, special-shaped, and tempered (2-5mm) for finishing,Specializing in the production of high-precision TV, LCD/LED screen protection glass, AR anti-reflection glass, digital picture frames, advertising machines, photocopier glass, etc. 

 

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Our Certificate
 

Our company passes ISO90001. 3C Certification.Our products comply with ROHS, REACH, EN12150-1 and other standards 

 

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Asked Questions

Q: What is the lifespan of tempered glass?

A: The lifespan of a tempered glass screen protector can vary depending on the quality of the product and how often you use your device. However, a good suggestion is to replace your tempered glass screen protector every 3-6 months or as soon as it starts to show signs of wear.

Q: What are the labeling requirements for tempered glass?

A: The label shall be acid-etched, sandblasted, ceramic-fired, embossed-mark, or shall be of a type which, once applied, cannot be removed without being destroyed. Country-specific laws similarly require a permanent label on most or all safety glass.

Q: What is a tempered glass panel?

A: Tempered or toughened glass is a type of safety glass processed by controlled thermal or chemical treatments to increase its strength compared with normal glass. Tempering puts the outer surfaces into compression and the interior into tension.

Q: What is the standard for tempered glass?

A: The industry standard specification requirements for heat-treated or tempered glasses are ASTM C1048. For heat-strengthened glass, the requirement is a surface compression of 3,500 to 7,500 psi with no requirement for edge compression.

Q: Why we should not use tempered glass?

A: If you want real screen protection you want something with high impact resistance and shatter proof. Glass will never be shatter proof so you will never get real impact resistance performance from Tempered Glass. This may feel like an ad but Rhino Shield is currently the best on the market for impact resistance.

Q: What locations are tempered glass required?

A: When There Are Legal Requirements. According to International Building Code, if you have any fixture with a door (bathtub, shower, sauna, etc.), any window less than 60 inches above the floor must be tempered. Additionally, if a window meets all of the following criteria, it legally needs to be tempered.

Q: What is the safety feature of tempered glass?

A: When tempered glass does break, it shatters into small cubes, reducing the likelihood of serious injury on impact. Therefore, it qualifies as a safety glazing material. Tempering increases a lite's edge strength, so it is specified when designers anticipate high thermal stresses.

Q: How high does tempered glass need to be?

A: The greater risk of slip and fall injuries in wet areas means that bathrooms, saunas, and hot tubs are places where is tempered window (glass) necessary. You must temper all glass if its bottom edge is less than five feet above a walking or standing surface such as a shower floor.

Q: Does tempered glass have to be marked?

A: Each pane of tempered glass, except tempered spandrel glass, shall be permanently identified by the manufacturer. The identification mark shall be acid etched, sand blasted, ceramic fired, laser etched, embossed or of a type that, once applied, cannot be removed without being destroyed.

Q: How thick is tempered glass panel?

A: Glass ranges in thickness depending on its physical makeup, toughened glass can be typically supplied between the thicknesses of 3 - 12mm and laminated glass can typically be between 5 - 12mm.

Q: Why is tempered glass so expensive?

A: Tempered glass can't be adjusted once it has undergone the tempering process, which means each piece of glass has to be custom manufactured. This makes it much more expensive to install than some other options, like security window films.

Q: How is tempered glass measured?

A: Tempered glass. Local bow is measured with a ruler parallel to the edge and 150 mm from the edge of the glass. The measurement length is 300mm. The waviness is the value of the height of trough or peak measured by a feeler divided by 300mm.

Q: Are cheap tempered glass worth it?

A: Cheaper options may not offer the same level of protection or may not be as durable. It's important to carefully consider the features and quality of the tempered glass protector when making a purchase to ensure that it meets your specific needs. Most of the cheap tempered glasses will not have Oleophobic coating.

Q: Does tempered glass weaken over time?

A: As the tempered glass slowly deteriorates with use and temperature changes, the chip slowly spreads on a microscopic level. Over time, the glass is weakened enough to shatter. While it may seem that there is no cause for the break, there is always a reason why glass breaks spontaneously.

Q: Is tempered glass very expensive?

A: Tempered glass is also costly to purchase and definitely more expensive than standard glass, but less costly than laminated glass. Depending on the preferences of a commercial building owner, the cost is another point of difference that dictates the choice between laminated and tempered glass.

Q: How do you cut tempered glass?

A: Various how-to guides will tell you that you can cut tempered glass by first annealing the piece. This involves heating the glass in a kiln and then letting it slowly cool over a course of eight or nine hours. After you anneal it, you might be able to cut it into the size and shape you're looking for.

Q: What is stronger than tempered glass?

A: Laminated glass is more robust and safer compared to tempered glass, thus making it is the better choice. Although tempered glass does offer breakage resistance and high-strength, laminated glass provides additional features such as soundproofing and UV resistance.

Q: Is tempered glass burglar proof?

A: Though it is stronger and safer than standard window glass, tempered glass is not recommended for security applications. A determined intruder will have no difficulty smashing right through tempered glass panels and gaining entry to your business.

Q: What temperature does tempered glass melt?

A: Flexi Says: Glass doesn't have a specific melting point as it gradually transitions from a hard and brittle state to a molten state. However, most common forms of glass melt at temperatures between 1,400 to 1,600 degrees Celsius (2,552 to 2,912 degrees Fahrenheit).

Q: Can tempered glass be cut?

A: No, tempered glass cannot be cut after it has already been shaped because this will likely result in costly damage. Editor's Note: This blog post was originally published in February 2017 and has been revised to reflect industry updates.

As one of the leading tempered glass control panel manufacturers and suppliers in China, we warmly welcome you to wholesale cheap tempered glass control panel from our factory. All custom made products are with high quality and competitive price.

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