A handbook of laboratory glass-blowing

audiobook

A handbook of laboratory glass-blowing

by Bernard D. (Bernard Dell) Bolas

EN·~1 hours·9 chapters

Chapters

9 total

A Handbook of Laboratory Glass-Blowing - BY - BERNARD D. BOLAS - WITH NUMEROUS DIAGRAMS IN THE TEXT - BY NAOMI BOLAS

1:50

PREFACE

0:42

Handbook of Laboratory Glass-Blowing

0:02

CHAPTER I

8:04

CHAPTER II

22:26

CHAPTER III

22:03

CHAPTER IV

27:00

CHAPTER V

26:13

INDEX

2:18

Description

This compact handbook offers a hands‑on introduction to the art of laboratory glass‑blowing, aimed at students, technicians, and any scientist who needs to shape, join, or repair glassware. Written in a straightforward style, it walks the reader through the essential principles of choosing apparatus, handling tools, and understanding the behavior of different glasses. Clear line drawings accompany each step, showing everything from simple mouth‑blowpipes to more elaborate multi‑jet furnaces, while practical tips help avoid common cracks and leaks.

The text is organized into short sections that progress from easy tasks—cutting tubes, making thermometer bulbs, and assembling basic joints—to more advanced projects such as internal seals, vacuum tubes, and custom condensers. Throughout, the author stresses the why behind each technique, encouraging readers to internalize the reasoning and adapt methods to their own needs. For anyone setting up a modest lab or looking to sharpen their glass‑working skills, the guide serves as a reliable, experience‑based reference that balances theory with immediate, usable instruction.

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Details

Language

en

Duration

~1 hours (106K characters)

Publisher of text edition

Project Gutenberg

Credits

Produced by The Online Distributed Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net. (This file was produced from images generously made available by The Internet Archive/American Libraries.)

Release date

2010-06-24

Rights

Public domain in the USA.

About the author

BD

Bernard D. (Bernard Dell) Bolas

b. 1893

Best known for practical books on scientific glassworking, this early 20th-century writer helped explain the craft behind making and shaping laboratory apparatus. His surviving bibliography points to a hands-on interest in the tools and techniques of experimental work.

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