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Lab talk, the good, the bad, and the ugly
Porcelain
Advice on layering buccal cutback
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<blockquote data-quote="ztech" data-source="post: 326057" data-attributes="member: 3022"><p>Vita recommends that you fire their porcelain with little condensing and definitely not dry. My judge to how wet it should be is when you can touch it and not leave finger prints on it, so relatively wet. The Vita parameters are what I use and except for really thick porcelain, I never have and issue. I suspect what you were doing was disturbing the wetting the raw porcelain has to the liner surface, when you dried the porcelain with the tissue. The grain size on the VM9 makes it easy to disturb the stack it you are not extra careful.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="ztech, post: 326057, member: 3022"] Vita recommends that you fire their porcelain with little condensing and definitely not dry. My judge to how wet it should be is when you can touch it and not leave finger prints on it, so relatively wet. The Vita parameters are what I use and except for really thick porcelain, I never have and issue. I suspect what you were doing was disturbing the wetting the raw porcelain has to the liner surface, when you dried the porcelain with the tissue. The grain size on the VM9 makes it easy to disturb the stack it you are not extra careful. [/QUOTE]
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Lab talk, the good, the bad, and the ugly
Porcelain
Advice on layering buccal cutback
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