So why don’t boat manfacturers use automo type glass instead of lexan that crazes like crazy? Engineering the window area / hatch covers so that it doesn’t flex much? Just asking...
That, and the fact that most port and hatch windows have a slight curvature which would be hell to bend glass upon.Engineering the window area / hatch covers so that it doesn’t flex much? Just asking...
Some do, not all.So why don’t boat manfacturers use automo type glass instead of lexan that crazes like crazy?
i just did cast acrylic flush mounts in my boat a few weeks back. a few days ago we had a very windy night. I now have and arc of scratches in my shiny new windows from my tarp.....It's a question of money. Most of the windows on super yachts are glass. I have glass windows on my Shannon motorsailer. After 8 years they are clear as when new - as you'd expect from glass.
If you do plastic - Lexan crazes and scratches much worse than cast acrylic (e.g. plexiglass). I think all standard boat hatches are cast acrylic.
Steve Dashew uses 3/4" thick toughened safety glass in his ocean going powerboats. I'm not sure you could break 3/4" toughened glass with a hammer SetSail FPB » Blog Archive » Glazing
One of the big producers of marine glass is Gariboldi Glass in Vancouver. Besides yachts they do pilot boats and many CG patrol boats. Glass Supplier, Glass Contractor, Ceramic Frit
Auto glass is weak in comparison to polycarbonate. My local glass guy gave me a demonstration. I had removed the original 1961 tempered glass during some work on my boat. The glass had light scratching around the edges from years of varnish maintenance.So why don’t boat manfacturers use automo type glass instead of lexan that crazes like crazy? Engineering the window area / hatch covers so that it doesn’t flex much? Just asking...
Install cover on them and eliminate crazing. Most boats spend 90% of their life in a slip. Covers on them during this time will eliminate the problem while taking them off for the other 10% will have no ill effect ( although I just leave mine on).
I suspect that's why our polycarbonate fixed ports were secured with screws as well as adhesive. Flexing that much might quite rare, but still possible if smacked by enough water. I have been offshore in 19 foot seas that put green tops over the deck sometimes, and would never choose to be in anything stronger. Hopefully conservative weather routing will let me avoid that... or just walking inland and sitting under a tree... !Auto glass in an offshore boat would not be insurable. The toughened safety glass that meets Lloyds and ABS standards is hard to break with a 10lb sledge. A bigger risk with all glazing (including glass, Lexan and Plexiglass) is if it flexes enough to pop out of the frames during a wave strike. That's why better installations are now bonded rather than framed.