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Moderustic Aquatic Glassel Fireplace Glass Rocks Propane Fireplaces

Ed@Moderustic.com 909 989 6129

1/4" Gray Reflective Base Glass*

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This is a Reflective Gray Base Glass and is Chromium coated.

1/4 Gray Reflective

1/4 Gray Reflective

1/4 Gray Reflective

 

pyrite gray 3

pyrite gray 2

pyrite gray 1

 

gray pyrite 300

gray pyrite 1 300

gray pyrite 2 300




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The pit below has Gray Base Glass and Gray Reflective Base Glass


pit 1

pit 2

 

The fire pit below was built by Mark Showalter in Washington state.

He used:

Gray Base Glass and Gray Reflective Base Glass,

Gray Pyrite Base Glass,

Copper Ruby Red Topper,

and Black Base Glass mixed in.

This is the stone pot with the bottom up.

Mark Showalter 1

Mark Showalter 2

Mark Showalter 3

They drilled for the trimming valve to be installed.

Mark Showalter 4

Mark Showalter 5

Mark Showalter 6

Mark Showalter 7

Mark Showalter 8

Mark Showalter 9

Mark Showalter 10

Mark Showalter 13

Mark Showalter 15

Mark Showalter 16

Mark Showalter 17

Mark Showalter 18

A picture is worth a thousand words, and here you have it.

Mark Showalter 19

 

The fireplace below has Gray Base Glass and Bronze Base Glass Topped with Bronze Reflective Base Glass and Gray Reflective Base Glass.
nh 2
nh 3
nh 4


 

This next fireplace is a direct vent conversion and the glass that Charlene used was:
and
I think she wanted it to POP and it did!
Charlene 5
Charlene 4
Charlene 3
Charlene 2
Charlene 1

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The Fireplace below from Larry and Bonnie Bidwell was a typical wood burning fireplace. YUK!. Larry and bonnie are Geologists/ rock hounds with an extensive collection! Here are the fireplace pictures with the FireGlass/ fire glass installed:

Larry Bidwell 7

Pretty, don't you think so? Pretty Ugly! Can you honestly tell me you still like wood????

Larry Bidwell 8

Larry Bidwell 18

They still have yet to clean the bricks above the fireplace, but this is the result of burning wood!

Larry Bidwell 21

Larry Bidwell 22

Larry Bidwell 5

Below are a couple of pictures of Larry and Bonnie's garden with their collection, amazing if you were to see it!

Larry Bidwell 4



Larry Bidwell 3

The next fireplace is a self installation/ remodel.

They installed an:

1/8" Gray Base Glass under

1/4" Gray Reflective Base Glass.

Erin Segars 1

Very nice but dated and out with the old.

Erin Segars 8

Erin Segars 2

Erin Segars 9

Erin Segars 3

Erin Segars 10

Erin Segars 11

Erin Segars 6

Steel surrounds manufactured and installed.

Erin Segars 5

Erin Segars 7

Erin Segars 4

 

The fire pit below was purchased locally and then we converted it to burn propane without soot! The colors used were:

Starfire Base Glass,

and topped with 1 lb of Copper Ruby Red Topper. I guess he wanted a lot of color.
James 2
Here is what is looked like when he started. These manufactures have no imagination!
James 3
James 4
This only cost about $100.00, complete!

James 1

 Cool Flames

On this page we will be posting some real cool fire flame pictures. You're more than welcome to send yours.
This fireplace has:
But you can't see that now. We will be posting daytime pictures so you can see the actual glass. We will be posting the yellow flames as well. We will tell you how to do this in the near future, really!
Comments and testimonial by the customer:


Ed

Here are the other shots you requested. I tried many angles, lights, etc., yet could not get an accurate picture of the natural light setting. The silicone carbide is so reflective that it goes to light grey in all of the shots, and the smoke glass looks pale green/blue where in reality it looks almost black.

Another description that may be even more appropriate of the daytime look is that of a neatly piled burned out fire, except that all of the “ash” is reflective and sparkly.

Can not explain why in some of the shots the flame appears greenish. The blue colored flames are not exactly right either. The real color is closer to ultraviolet than anything else.
Several of the shots, including 01, 29, and 50, have been taken from the same location. You can tell the ones taken at full open valve by the increased amount of color in the shots.

Additional photos in separate mailings

Keary
I am very happy with my “new” gas fireplace. I thought I would share with you the enclosed photos taken with an ordinary digital camera with no ambient light except the fire itself. The camera was placed in various locations around the fire on the hearth proper. Unfortunately the stills cannot depict the fire action. What is amazing about the fire is the low spread out blue flame pattern instead of the conventional tall yellow flames in the middle.

The fireplace is open on three sides 30”x40”, The pit was filled with coarse bagged lava rock form Home Depot approximately 1” deep to the bottom of the U shaped burner gas pipe with the holes pointing down. It was then topped with Moderustic fine lava rock to fill in the voids on the top leaving the bottom of the burner only slightly submerged below the layer of the finer lava rock from Moderustic..

The next layer was black sand followed by S----- C-----. The sand was mounded in the center over the burners. A sprinkling of grey glass over the SC and a topper of Bronze ½” glass was sprinkled over the smaller sized matrix to finish. The final product is very dark and reflective with tiny reflections off of the s----- c------ and larger reflections off of the gradated glass during the day and in ambient light. It looks a little like a lava field that you might run across in the Mojave Desert near Barstow. Not at all showy, yet very subtle to the view in daylight.

The coarse lava rock on the bottom layer, with the finer layer on top to keep the gas in longer, acts as manifold carrying gas to all portion of the firebox floor covered with that material. I stopped the coarse rock short of the metal posts in a semi circular shape in plan and back filled with sand so that the flame would not reach the posts. The visual result around the posts is that the gas reaching the end of the coarse material immediately goes upward creating a flowing arc of fire around the posts. This is seen as a blur in the photos.

The underlying coarse rock distributes the gas pretty evenly across the firebox floor creating a even matrix of small flames on the surface as it works its way up through the media. The extreme perimeter appears more active. There are more constant more steady flames from the mound. Because there is less gas at the perimeter, the gas there burns in horizontal spurts and appears like lightning bolts licking the edges of the firebox.

There are small vortexes of fire that form and sometimes work there way around the base of the mound on the center but usually preferring a particular area to hang out.

The overall effect is one of a dispersed flame. As if the entire bed of the fireplace is afire with a low blue flame. With all the lights out in the room it is quite magical. Not at all anything like a conventional yellow flame in the center. Due to the dispersion of the flame across the large firebox area, there is a lot of heat generated and dispersed into the room instead of up the flue. This is not a design for summer time nights.

Everyone who witnesses this flame is impressed with the “light show” quality of the burn.

In the future I plan to change out the media and experiment with different ways to direct the gas and resultant flame to achieve different effects.

Next time I am thinking of laying a pattern of coarse rock and infilling between the “arms” of coarse rock with sand so that the gas will follow the “arms” and come up in more predictable places, perhaps creating little vortexes or pyres at the ends of the “arms”.

Regards,
Keary Gregg




 

 

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Ed@Moderustic.com 909 989 6129

9467 9th street Unit D

Rancho Cucamonga, California 91730
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Moderustic Aquatic Glassel Fireplace Glass Rocks Propane Fireplaces