Weber Glass Inc

812 S. Line Rd. Lecanto, Fl. 34461

Home
About Us
Residential
Commercial Projects
Industrial
Institutional/Civil
Professional/Medical
Flat Glass
Insulated Glass
Acrylics
Rain Handler System
Contact Us
Flat Glass:
                 Flat Glass is the basic product upon which the glazing industry is designed. It is the common glass that tends to break into large pieces and is often used for table tops, glass tables, shelves, decorative glass, picture frame glass, window and door glass. Flat Glass is also utilized for all types of residential glass repairs and custom glass work.
Plate Glass: Plate Glass is the basic glass product. Utilized for a myriad of glazing applications, it is also the starting point for production of most common types of specialty glazing products. Plate Glass is available in nominal thicknesses of 1/16" single strength (SSB), 1/8" double strength (DSB), 3/16" and 1/4".
                                                                             
Tempered Glass: Tempered glass is heat treated to significantly resist breakage. When tempered glass breaks, it breaks in a predictable manner thus providing a major safety advantage in almost all of its applications. Tempered Glass has a broad product application from glass sliding doors in homes and offices to shower and bath enclosures to residential door and window glass. Tempered Glass must be ordered to the size necessary to accommodate the specific application and cannot be cut once produced.
 Laminated Glass: Laminated Glass is made of two or more layers of glass with one or more "interlayers" of polymetric (PVB) material bonded between the glass layers.  Laminated Glass offers many advantages. Safety and security are the best known of these. Rather than shattering on impact,  laminated glass is held together by the interlayer, reducing the safety hazard associated with shattered glass fragments. The interlayer also provides a way to apply coloring, sound dampening, fire resistance, ultraviolet filtering and other technologies that can be imbedded into the interlayer.          

                     
 Mirrored Glass: To produce mirrored glass, a metal coating is applied to one side of the glass. The coating is generally made of silver, aluminum, gold or chrome. For simple mirrored glass, a fully reflective metal coating is applied and then sealed with a protective layer. To produce "one-way" mirrors, a much thinner metal coating is used, with no additional sealing or otherwise opaque layer. Mirrored glass is gaining an increasing prominence in architecture, for important traditional reasons as well as for aesthetic effect.