Blacksmith and Metalworking Forum
This is a discussion on Mirrors within the Problem Solving forums, part of the Blacksmithing category; Has anyone got a simple way to fix a mirror in an iron frame? Have been racking my brain but ...
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| Has anyone got a simple way to fix a mirror in an iron frame? Have been racking my brain but can't come up with a solution that doesn't involve drilling holes and tapping threads. Last edited by brian; 04-22-2008 at 08:05 AM. Reason: spelling |
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Thought I'd start with a square frame of 1 1/2 by 3/8 flat bar ,just a small frame 12" square . |
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| One of the methods I've been working on for holding glass in metal frames is a form of bracket. It's a simple "U" of steel riveted through the center to the outside frame. The walls of the "U" are dependent on the weight of the glass to secure (12ga or 16ga usually) and can be bent cold. A thin slice of close-cell foam protects the glass. I would bend the back tab using a torch (to prevent strain) to a 90 degree angle and the front tab to a 45-60 degree angle. Insert the foam and the glass, then bend the front tab to secure. |
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| Gday Brian, You could get some u shaped Alum channel, but you would still have to screw it on. Or you could use small angle for the frame, either with tabs welded to it to hold the glass in or weld some angle to the back of a frame to form the U channel. Pad the glass with foam, felt, rubber or some such. Hope this helps. Rusty_iron, Brisbane, Oz. |
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| Consider the thickness of your glass ( say 1/4" plate mirror ). Experiment with some small square heated and forged on the edge of a piece of 1/4" stock ( wrapped around the edge ). See if the wrapped square fits over the edge of the glass easily. If not, put the square back over the 1/4 stock and tap the edge part ( cold) and see if that improves the fit. you should be able to find the right combination of thickness to fit over the edge of the glass in this manner. Just my 5¢ worth.
__________________ " It ain't real if it ain't forged " |
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| Case has it right. Silicone will hold the mirror better than any sort of tabs. Just design your frame so that you've got enough frame/mirror overlap (say at least 1/4") then put a small bead of silicone on the very edge of the mirror and "set". That's how we would've done it in the glass shop I worked in anyway. Let it cure overnight and voila! You're good to go.
__________________ The Fire is King. |