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L215 is intended for use with the commercial glazes available from Duncan, Mayco, Spectrum, and similar companies. It achieves fit to these glazes with the use of only 15% talc in its recipe. Although it is more difficult to produce ware of light colors with a red body, many people find that opacified white glazes can be used effectively on red burning materials. L215 is made from natural red-firing terra cotta clays that melt at low temperatures, thus it develops better fired strength than more refractory white burning bodies.
This material fires to a light red at cone 04-06 and the color intensifies to a
brick red by cone 02. Further temperature increase shifts toward deep red, then brown, until it reaches its maximum strength and
dark brown color around cone 1. The body becomes volatile above this range so that small changes in chemistry, mineralogy and
particle size can mean that at temperatures above cone 2 it may hold together one time while on another occasion it may bloat and
warp badly. Furthermore, like many terra cotta bodies, the color evolution is much more rapid from cone 02-1. Thus, ware fired in
this range without good firing control will be subject to wide variations in color with only slight changes in firing temperature.
Also, although the fired body may appear stable against warping at cone 03-02, do not overestimate its ability to withstand
warping on extremely overhung shapes (e.g. bowls with flared flat rims). Because of the fine sand it contains, the fired surface of L215 displays a slight grainy texture compared to the relatively smooth surface of our Majolica body.
Since terra cotta bodies are weak and porous at cone 06-04 bisque fire as high as possible (cone 03 is a good compromise, it is much stronger and the matrix will still absorb enough water during glazing).
If you are mixing your own glazes and they are shivering or crazing on this body, you might try one of our other low fire reds such as Majolica. L215 responds well to our recommended low fire base glaze recipes.
Since L215 is not ground to our finest size, there is some danger of pinholing if the glaze is not given adequate time to even out at top temperature. We thus recommend at least some soaking time during all firings. Also keep in mind that transparent glazes will tend to darken the color of the clay somewhat.
Drying Shrinkage: 5.0-6.0% Dry Strength: n/a Water Content: 19-20.5% Drying Factor: C110-C120 Dry Density: 1.98
+48: 0.5-1.0% 48-65: 2.0-5.0 65-100: 5.0-9.0 100-150: 4.0-7.0 150-200: 3.5-6.0 200-325: 8.0-12.0
Cone 04: 1.5-2.5% Cone 02: 4.5-5.5 Cone 2: 6.0-7.5
Cone 04: 10.0-12.0% Cone 02: 3.5-5.0 Cone 2: 1.0-2.0
BaO 0.0 CaO 0.5 K2O 2.8 MgO 4.7 Na2O 0.0 TiO2 0.6 Al2O3 13.2 P2O5 0.2 SiO2 67.6 Cr2O3 0.0 Fe2O3 5.0 MnO 0.0 LOI 5.3%
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Plainsman Clays Ltd. Box 1266, 702 Wood Street, Medicine Hat, Alberta T1A 7M9 Phone: 403-527-8535 FAX: 403-527-7508 |
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URL of this page is http://digitalfire.com/plainsman/data/L215.HTM -- Revised: 10/24/06 Copyright 1997 Author: Tony Hansen