fdimike wrote:Let me repeat myself. You cannot cut tempered glass. You can cut regular glass and then have it tempered afterwards. Any attempt to cut tempered glass will result in a pile of small pieces of glass at your feet. The whole point of tempering glass is for safety reasons. Regular glass when broken will result in sharp shards of glass which will cut like a very sharp knife. Tempered glass when broken will only result in a pile of small pieces of glass which will not be as dangerous. Glass can be tempered by either heat of chemical treatment. The shop may have tempered the glass themselves after it was cut.
In fact it is possible to cut tempered glass, but there is a big BUT!
Place your tempered glass into a craft oven and set the temperature to 900 degrees F. Once the glass has reached this temperature, turn the oven off and allow the oven and the glass to cool for at least eight hours before removing the glass from the oven. This process is known as annealing, and it removes stress from the glass. The glass is no longer tempered.
So having glass cut using this method makes glass not to be tempered even you start from the best tempered glass you can find.
Here below is one alternative. I did not find photo of those big tiles (60x60 cm). I like small ones more, because round corners are not possible with large ones. They have also full transparent, different colors, pictures etc. Of course, if you, sezze, want a simple plain glass, this is not for you.
