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HPM-20 Bentonite powder (left) and National Standard 325 (right) powder samples fired to cone 9 oxidation. These have shrunk alot since cone 6, but are not yet melting.
#1: I got it in a foot-thick layer in a gravel pit in Leader, Saskatchewan (half way up the slope). I code numbered it L3822.
#2: The two lower bars are L3822, fired at cone 1 and 2 (at cone 2 the center Aero-chocolate textured material bursts out). The upper bars, 3822A, are a 50:50 mix with Pioneer kaolin (also cone 1 and 2).
#3: L3822A fired at cones 04,03,02,01,3 (top to bottom).
#4: 90:10 mix of M2, the mid-temperature red burning material Plainsman Clays uses, and L3822 (Cone 06,04,03,02,01 bottom to top). The 10% addition supercharges the M2 plasticity beyond what is practical to dry.
#5: The pure material, leather hard mugs (with exceptionally thin walls (because it is so plastic).
#6: The pure material cracks, only one of the 50:50 mix survived drying (even though they were dried over a period of weeks).
#7: Bisque fired 50:50 and pure material mugs.
#8: Cone 6 mug of the 50:50 mix. Notice it gases and clouds the clear glaze.
What is this clay? It is not a balanced material, but highly bentonitic. With lots of fluxes (like KNaO, CaO, MgO), it matures below what is possible with mixes of feldspar and kaolin. Its super fine particle size (and thus high surface area) enable imposing its maturity (even when mixed with a refractory material like kaolin). Treating this as a bentonite seems best, adding no more than 5% to improve body plasticity. Notice that it fires to a much nicer surface than the commercial raw bentonites shown below.
Materials |
HPM-20 Volclay Bentonite
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