Features of laminated glass
The characteristics of laminated glass: even if the glass is broken, the fragments will stick to the film, and the broken glass surface remains clean and smooth. This effectively prevents the occurrence of debris stabbing and penetrating falling events, ensuring personal safety. In Europe and the United States, most architectural glass uses laminated glass, not only to avoid injury accidents, but also because laminated glass has excellent. The characteristics of laminated glass: even if the glass is broken, the fragments will stick to the film, and the broken glass surface remains clean and smooth. This effectively prevents the occurrence of debris stabbing and penetrating falling events, ensuring personal safety. In Europe and the United States, most architectural glass uses laminated glass, not only to avoid injury accidents, but also because laminated glass has excellent anti-seismic intrusion ability. The medium membrane can withstand the continuous attack of murder weapons such as hammers and kitchen knives, and can also withstand the penetration of bullets for a considerable period of time, so it is extremely safe. The glass is safely broken and may break under the impact of the heavy ball, but the whole glass still maintains a complete interlayer, and fragments and sharp small fragments are still stuck to the intermediate membrane. When this kind of glass is broken, the pieces will not spread out, and it is often used in vehicles such as cars. Tempered glass requires a strong impact force to break. Once broken, the entire piece of glass will burst into countless fine particles, leaving only a few broken pieces of glass in the frame. Ordinary glass breaks on impact, which is a typical case of breakage that produces many long, sharp pieces. When the wire glass is broken, the tooth shaped sheet of the mirror is wrapped around the hole, and there are many glass sheets around the penetration point, and the broken wire length is different.