mike
no posts
Member since October 2004
Posts: 0
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Post by mike on Dec 13, 2003 22:08:55 GMT -5
hi every one i am just starting tumbling. and i have some petoskey stones. how do you start with grit. there soft. stone would you start with #3grit. please help.thank you mike
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rockhound
off to a rocking start
Member since October 2003
Posts: 6
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Post by rockhound on Dec 13, 2003 22:40:05 GMT -5
Mike I am new at rock tumbling also. I have Petoskey stones also. I read that since they are a soft stone you have to be real careful. The book told how to polish by hand. I tumbled mine for about 24 hrs. I used a medium grit. By looking at them, I am afraid to put them back in the tumbler with the polish compound. My plan is just spray them with lacquer. I haven't done it yet. Hope this helps. I am sure someone who has more knowledge and maybe has tumbled Petoskey stones would have more info then me. I also have what you call 'soft Petoskey stones'. I know those cannot go in the tumbler or be hand polished. The book tells me just to put them in a pretty jar with some mineral oil. I was thinking about trying to spray just one of them with the lacquer and see what happens. Good Luck
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Post by docone31 on Dec 13, 2003 22:44:09 GMT -5
Mike, petrosky stone, as far as I know is a calcite. The coral it originates from has not gone mineral transfer. Of the few petrosky stones I have tumbled, I have so degraded the stone with all the polishes I was left with very little. A stone polisher I know, saves the final polish for the petosky stones after he cabs the original shape. He routinely mass final polished all his cabs I have never been able to final polish my cabs so I use a leather buff and cerium or tin oxide. I suggest if you have some choice samples, put them aside. Larimar is also similar. Do not tumble Larimar. If the only way I could polish petrosky stone was to tumble, I would do 220 for a few days, checking constantly. I would move up to 660 for a week, and run at least two weeks with cerium oxide. There might be some non mineralized organics trapped in the centers of the coral cells. Watch for gas build up. I once tumbled some fossilized buffalo scat and the tumbler had a soupy green mixture. There was no odor, but I suspect the mineralization was incomplete deep into the stones. It leached out with the tumble. Just my perspective on this. I often wondered if the reason the petrosky stone is localized to the Great Lakes region and not near ocean shores is the wave activity and the softness of the stone. If some seem agatized tumbling might work. Just keep a watch on it.
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Noah
starting to spend too much on rocks
Member since November 2003
Posts: 102
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Post by Noah on Dec 14, 2003 4:39:03 GMT -5
I'd take it one step further than doc, and probably start the tumble at ....12 hr intervals...and switch quickly to 600 grit...or maybe even 1000 grit.
-Noah-
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Post by thank you all mike on Dec 14, 2003 10:31:35 GMT -5
you gave me some good ideas ill try them.
thank you.
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mike
no posts
Member since October 2004
Posts: 0
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Post by mike on Dec 15, 2003 20:41:08 GMT -5
:)hello its mike i just started my pre polish on my petoskey stones i did what you all said and that seams to work fine i left them in 14 houres with 300 then went to 400 ...14h. then 600. 14h. not done yet but they sure look prety good.... ;D thanks for all the help. ......mike
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