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Agree with Marcia that rods are better than wire. Look at the attached link at the Roselli beadtree holders; rods can be purchased separately. If you are firing at higher than low fire temperatures, a thicker rod will not sag.

 

http://www.baileypot...ture/stilts.htm

 

 

 

Hi I have bought this and the thicker rods don't sag but have been unluckey with the thinner ones. Totally sag and I have also found that you definately need to fire them empty first as they flake the first time. Trina

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Agree with Marcia that rods are better than wire. Look at the attached link at the Roselli beadtree holders; rods can be purchased separately. If you are firing at higher than low fire temperatures, a thicker rod will not sag.

 

http://www.baileypot...ture/stilts.htm

 

 

Hi I have bought this and the thicker rods don't sag but have been unluckey with the thinner ones. Totally sag and I have also found that you definately need to fire them empty first as they flake the first time. Trina

 

How thick?

Is 15 gauge good enough or should I go for 9? I'm going to fire to ^5,

Trina, thank you for sharing to fire empty first.

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  • 11 months later...

Agree with Marcia that rods are better than wire. Look at the attached link at the Roselli beadtree holders; rods can be purchased separately. If you are firing at higher than low fire temperatures, a thicker rod will not sag.

 

http://www.baileypot...ture/stilts.htm

 

George Roselli was the chief tech person where I went to school at the Philadelphia College of Art. He was working on those products when I knew him.

The Ceramic Store in Philadelphia is now producing his line.

 

Marcia

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I think you'd be better off to buy an actual rod of heavy gauge rather than kanthal wire which can soften and have structural failure when it is hot.

marcia

 

 

 

 

Yeah, whenever i fire windchimes I get a nichrome rod and prop it up with two kiln posts then hand the pices from the rod, over a glaze catcher.

 

 

 

Darrel

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