Under federal state and local building codes bathroom glazing windows shower doors and even mirrors must meet safety standards.
Difference between safety sheet glass and safety plate glass.
Difference between plate tempered glass.
Diy frequently asked questions what is the difference between plate glass and sheet glass.
Sheet glass is the most common glass.
Safety glass is not as strong.
Large sheets of glass for storefronts and shop windows were made this way and the same technology was used to make mirrors.
Although the plate glass process was replaced by the float glass method in the 1960s people still tend to refer to a large flat pane of unstained glass.
Other thicknesses are available.
Most shower enclosures use tempered glass but more often than in the past laminated glass is being used in some shower enclosures because it doesn t shatter into the tiny pieces.
Because lexan is so strong it can also be manufactured into thinner sheets that don t weigh as much as safety glass.
Tempered safety glass has an impact strength that s five times higher than normal annealed glass of the same thickness while lexan has an impact strength that s 250 times that of annealed glass.
The glass often shatters or explodes into many tiny and dull pieces.
Laminated glass is safety glass because if broken the glass stays bonded to the plastic sheet that is between two separate lites of glass.
Tempered glass is considered safety glass because it shatters in a unique way that prevents harm.
You can see broken glass with the picture on the left.
Tempered glass can withstand 5 7 times the amount of pressure than plate glass thus it is.
It is usually about 3 32 for single strength glass.
In other words the glass used in bathroom mirrors must be.
Plate glass is generally used for large picture windows.