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Jen-Ken AF3P Bonnie Glo Tilt Glass Fusing Kiln – Tilting Clamshell Fiber Kiln 120V

Original price $0.00 - Original price $0.00
Original price $0.00
$1,186.00
$1,186.00 - $1,186.00
Current price $1,186.00
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Questions?
Call (801) 839-5882 9AM – 5PM MST
Shipping & Lead Times

DUE TO BRICK SHORTAGE, THESE TIME FRAMES MIGHT BE SLIGHTLY LONGER**

Made-to-Order kilns are built from scratch and have different lead times* Most kilns listed are made-to-order. Contact us for specific order times.

Quick Ship Kilns: Ship in 1-2 weeks

Estimated Lead Times Per Brand

Evenheat Kilns Lead Times: 6-8 weeks

Jen Ken Kilns Lead Times: 12-16+ weeks

Olympic Kilns Lead Times: 8-12 weeks

Speedball Wheels: Usually ship within 10 days. 

HotShotOvens: 2-4 days.

FREE SHIPPING TO US 48*

For more information visit our Shipping Policy

Why Buy From Us


We know you’ve got options. Here’s why customers choose Prokilnsupply.

  • Price Beat Guarantee: We’ll beat any advertised price. Call (801) 839-5882.
  • Free Shipping: Free shipping to the US Lower 48*.
  • Kiln & Studio Experts: Real support from people who know kilns—before and after you order.
  • Financing Available: Get the equipment you need now and pay over time.
  • Lifetime Customer Support: We’re here for setup questions, troubleshooting, and long-term help.
  • Secure Checkout: 100% secure payment processing.


We’re here for the long haul—not just to make the sale, but to help you get the best results from your kiln and equipment.
Learn more about us.

Price Guarantee

Lowest Price Guarantee

At ProKilnSupply, we want you to feel confident that you are getting a competitive price when you shop with us. When a product on our site is marked with our Lowest Price Guarantee, it means we stand behind that price.

If you find the same item offered online at a lower total price within 30 days of your purchase, let us know. If the listing qualifies under the terms below, we will refund you the difference.

We want every customer to shop knowing they are getting excellent value on their kiln or wheel.

How to Request a Price Difference Refund

To request a refund for the price difference, email us a link to the competing online listing within 30 days of your order date. Once we review the listing and confirm that it meets the requirements below, we will issue the appropriate credit.

Eligibility Requirements

Our Lowest Price Guarantee applies only when all of the following conditions are met:

  • The item must have been purchased first from ProKilnSupply
  • The competing offer must be from an online-only retailer
  • Promotional pricing, coupon offers, clearance deals, and limited-time specials are not eligible
  • Auction sites, marketplaces, and discounter platforms such as eBay are not eligible
  • The competing seller must be an authorized retailer for the brand
  • The competitor’s total advertised price must include shipping, handling, and any processing fees
  • The product must be an exact match, including the same model and availability status, such as in stock vs. in stock or made to order vs. made to order
  • The manufacturer must be Evenheat Kiln, Jen-Ken Kilns, or Paragon Industries

Additional Terms

ProKilnSupply reserves the right to deny any request that does not meet these requirements or appears to fall outside a reasonable and fair market price comparison.

Fire Two or Three Times a Day. From a Regular Wall Outlet.

Most glass kilns are slow. They take an hour to warm up, hours to cool down, and they tie up your studio for the entire day for a single firing. The Jen-Ken AF3P Bonnie Glo Plus doesn't work that way. It's an all-fiber kiln that heats fast, cools fast, and lets you do 2 to 3 firings in a single day. Pendants can be in and out in under an hour.

The reason: fiber instead of firebrick. A traditional brick kiln spends most of its energy heating the brick body, then takes hours to release that heat. The Bonnie Glo's rigid fiber walls don't absorb heat the way brick does, so the energy goes into your glass instead of into the kiln. That's what makes the fast firing schedules possible.

The other thing that makes this kiln special: it opens two ways. Top-load like a normal kiln, or clamshell-open the whole front so you can build your piece directly on the kiln floor at table height instead of reaching down into a chamber. For jewelers, painters, and anyone doing detailed layout work, that changes the whole workflow.

It runs on a standard 120V wall outlet (NEMA 5-15) at just 1,560 watts. No dedicated circuit, no electrician, no special setup. Plug it into the wall and fire. At 35 pounds, it's portable enough to take to workshops, classes, or pop-up events.

No shelf needed (and that's intentional)

Fiber kilns don't use traditional clay shelves. You fire directly on the kiln floor with kiln wash and a piece of fiber paper, Kaiser Lee board, or lava cloth under your work. That's part of why it heats so fast — there's no heavy shelf to bring up to temperature. If you've only used brick kilns before, this is a different setup, but it's simple once you've done it once.

Who Is This Kiln For?

The Bonnie Glo Plus is built for a very specific kind of glass artist. Here's how to tell if that's you.

✓ Glass jewelers firing pendants, cabochons, and small pieces

Sub-hour firings means you can iterate fast. Make a pendant, fire it, decide what to change, make another one. The clamshell opening makes laying out small pieces dramatically easier than reaching into a top-loader.

✓ Glass painters and enamelists doing multiple test firings

Painting on glass means testing colors and firing cycles constantly. A fiber kiln that lets you do three firings in a day instead of one is a real workflow upgrade. You can actually develop a piece in a single session.

✓ Traveling teachers and workshop instructors

35 pounds, plugs into any wall outlet, fits on a folding table. You can teach a fusing class at a community center, a craft fair, or a friend's living room without needing special electrical or freight. The clamshell makes demos easier too.

✓ Artists with day jobs who fire on evenings and weekends

Start a firing after work, finish before bed, let it cool overnight. The fast schedules mean glass fits into a normal life instead of demanding a whole free day every time you want to fire.

✓ Apartment dwellers and renters with no 240V access

If you live somewhere you can't install a dedicated 240V circuit, this is one of the few real glass kilns that works for you. Standard wall outlet, low draw, no permanent install.

Included with every order

A heavy duty stand sized for this kiln, the full operator manual, kiln wash to get you started, the Orton AF3P 3-button controller, a 1 year limited warranty on the kiln and 2 year warranty on the controller through Jen-Ken, and free freight shipping to the US Lower 48.

About the name

The Bonnie Glo kilns are named in honor of Bonnie Glotfelty, mother of Jen-Ken Kilns owners Mike and Randy. Bonnie was a cornerstone of the fired arts community from the late 1960s onward, and this kiln line is Jen-Ken's tribute to her decades of dedication to the industry.

Recommended Add-Ons

Fiber Shelf

An optional fiber shelf sits on the kiln floor and gives you a working surface you can lay out at your workbench, then transfer into the kiln when you're ready. Protects the kiln floor too — better to damage a shelf than the kiln body. Use kiln wash and fiber paper either way.

Fiber Paper, Kaiser Lee Board, or Lava Cloth

You'll need a release layer between your glass and the kiln floor (or fiber shelf). Fiber paper is the standard cheap option. Kaiser Lee board and lava cloth are reusable and give you more flexibility for slumping work. Add one to your order so you can fire on day one.

Stand with Caster Wheels

The standard stand is stationary. Caster wheels make the kiln easy to roll around the studio, tuck into a corner when not in use, or move between teaching spaces. Light enough that it's not a must-have at 35 pounds, but useful if the kiln will live somewhere it needs to move regularly.

Key Features

  • All-fiber construction, heats fast and cools fast for 2 to 3 firings per day (pendants in under an hour)
  • Clamshell-style opening alongside the standard top-load lid, so you can build pieces directly on the kiln floor at table height
  • 120V standard wall outlet (NEMA 5-15), no dedicated circuit or electrical work needed
  • Max temperature 1700°F, perfect for fusing, painting, enameling, and small slumping work
  • 15" wide x 5" deep chamber, 0.5 cubic feet — sized for jewelry, pendants, small dishes, and detailed work
  • Just 35 pounds, portable enough for traveling teachers, workshops, and pop-up classes
  • Fire directly on the kiln floor with fiber paper, Kaiser Lee board, or lava cloth — no heavy shelves needed
  • Orton AF3P 3-button controller standard, with preset glass schedules and custom programs
  • Free stand, kiln wash, and manual included with every order
  • 1 year warranty on the kiln and 2 year warranty on the controller from Jen-Ken, plus free freight shipping to the US Lower 48

Specifications

Model Jen-Ken AF3P Bonnie Glo Plus
Kiln Type Glass / Fiber (Fusing, Painting, Jewelry)
Body Material Rigid Fiber (no firebrick)
Opening Style Top-load + Clamshell (dual access)
Inside Dimensions 15" W x 5" H
Volume 0.5 cu ft
Max Temperature 1700°F
Voltage 120V
Amps 13
Watts 1,560
Plug Type NEMA 5-15 (standard wall outlet)
Product Weight 35 lbs
Shipping Weight 45 lbs
Warranty 1 Year on Kiln / 2 Year on Controller (Jen-Ken)

First fiber kiln? Let's make sure it's the right fit.

Fiber kilns work differently from brick kilns. Give us a call and we'll walk you through the workflow, the shelf and release options, and whether the Plus or one of the other Bonnie Glo models fits your projects best.

📞 (801) 839-5882

Monday to Friday, 9AM to 5PM MST

FAQ - KILNS

What to consider when buying a Kiln

1. What are you firing?
Different materials have different temperature requirements. Pottery and stoneware need to reach cone 6–10 (around 2200–2350°F), while glass fusing works at lower temperatures but demands very precise, programmable cooling. Knowing your primary material upfront narrows your options significantly.

2. How much volume do you need?
Think about how many pieces you fire per week. Hobbyists and home studios generally do well with kilns under 5 cubic feet. Working artists typically need 5–10 cubic feet, and classroom or production studios often require 10+. A good rule of thumb: buy slightly larger than you think you need — you can always fire a half-full kiln, but you can't fire a piece that doesn't fit.

3. Check your electrical setup before you buy
Most mid-to-large kilns require a 240V dedicated circuit, which may need to be installed by a licensed electrician. Smaller kilns may run on standard 120V. Always check the kiln's amperage requirements against your existing panel before purchasing — electrical upgrades can add $200–$500 to your setup cost.

4. Manual vs. digital controller
Manual kilns use switches you adjust by hand throughout the firing, requiring you to stay close. Digital controllers let you program a firing schedule and walk away. For most potters today, a digital controller is worth the extra cost — the results are more consistent and the convenience is hard to give up once you've had one.

5. Don't forget ventilation
Kilns release fumes from clay, glazes, and organic materials during firing. A downdraft vent system is strongly recommended for any indoor studio. It protects your health, improves firing results, and extends the life of your elements. Budget around $150–$300 for a quality vent, and factor it into your total setup cost from the start.

6. Think about long-term running costs
The purchase price is just the beginning. Heating elements need replacing every 100–200 firings ($100–$300 depending on kiln size). Electricity costs $2–$8 per firing depending on your kiln size and local rates. You'll also need kiln furniture — shelves, posts, and stilts — which are typically sold separately and are essential from day one.

What size kiln do I need for my studio?

The right size depends on how much you fire and how often. Hobby potters or small home studios generally do well with a compact kiln (under 5 cubic feet), while working artists and classroom studios benefit from a larger kiln like the Olympic Champ XL. Consider how many pieces you fire per week — if you're constantly waiting to fill a small kiln, it's time to size up. It's usually better to buy slightly larger than you think you need.

What's the difference between a top-loading and front-loading kiln

Top-loading kilns are the most common for pottery and ceramics. They're more energy-efficient, easier to load evenly, and generally more affordable. Front-loading kilns (also called car kilns or door kilns) are better suited for large sculptural work or production studios where loading heavy pieces at waist height is more practical. For most potters, a top-loader like the Champ XL is the right choice.

What electrical requirements does this kiln need?

Electrical requirements vary by kiln model and size. Many mid-size and larger kilns require a dedicated 240V circuit, while some smaller models may operate on 120V. It is important to check the kiln’s specifications for the correct voltage, amperage, outlet type, and breaker requirements before installation. A qualified electrician should handle installation if a new circuit or outlet is needed. Never use a kiln with an outlet or circuit that does not match the manufacturer’s requirements.

Can I fire both pottery and glass in the same kiln?

Yes, in some cases — but it depends on the kiln and how you plan to use it. Many electric kilns can be used for both pottery and glass, but the firing schedules for each are very different. Glass typically requires slower, more precise heating and cooling cycles to help prevent cracking, while pottery firing follows different temperature and timing needs. If you plan to fire both, a kiln with a programmable controller is especially helpful for managing and switching between firing programs. Always check the kiln manufacturer’s recommendations before using it for multiple materials.

What cone temperatures can this kiln reach?

The cone temperature a kiln can reach depends on the specific model. Many ceramic kilns are designed to fire anywhere from low-fire ranges like cone 06–04 up through mid-fire and, in some cases, high-fire ranges such as cone 8–10. Always check the kiln’s product specifications to confirm its maximum cone rating and make sure your clay and glaze are compatible with that firing range.

Do I need a kiln vent, and is one included?

A kiln vent is strongly recommended, though it may not be included with your kiln purchase. During firing, kilns release fumes from clay, glazes, and organic materials — these can be harmful in an enclosed space. A downdraft vent system pulls air through the kiln and exhausts it outside, protecting both you and your work. Even if your studio has good airflow, a dedicated vent improves firing results and extends the life of your elements and lid.

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