Glass cloth is also a term for a type of tea towel suited for polishing glass. The cloth is usually woven with the plain weave, and may be patterned in various ways, though checked cloths are the most common. The original cloth was made from linen, but a large quantity is made with cottonwarp and towweft, and in some cases they are composed entirely of cotton. Short fibres of the cheaper kind are easily detached from the cloth.[1]
In the Southern Plains during the Dust Bowl, states' healthofficials recommended attaching translucentglasscloth to the inside frames of windows to help in keeping the dust out of buildings, although people also used paperboard, canvas or blankets. Eyewitness accounts indicate they were not completely successful.[2]
Its bi-directional strength make glass cloth useful for some fiberglass reinforced plastics.[3] For example, the Rutan VariEze homebuilt aircraft uses a moldless glass cloth - epoxy composite structure and skin. Glass cloth is commonly used as the reinforcing lattice for pre-pregs.[4]
^Dust Bowl, The Southern Plains in the 1930s... by Donald Worster. Oxford University Press.
^Shindo, Y (2001). "Double Cantilever Beam Measurement and Finite Element Analysis of Cryogenic Mode I Interlaminar Fracture Toughness of Glass-Cloth/Epoxy Laminates". Journal of Engineering Materials and Technology. 123 (2): 191–197. CiteSeerX10.1.1.1064.8944. doi:10.1115/1.1345527.
^Rusnákov, S (2018). Overview of production of pre-preg, prototype and testing. XXIII International Conference on Manufacturing (Manufacturing 2018). Vol. 448. IOP Conference Series: Materials Science and Engineering. doi:10.1088/1757-899X/448/1/012069.