nursetumbler
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Member since February 2022
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Post by nursetumbler on Mar 13, 2022 11:42:00 GMT -5
Hello Everyone Well I am very sure this question has been asked and answered hundreds maybe thousands of times before. I have tried the search it multiple times putting in different search words. So here goes. If youre tired of the question please just scroll by. I just started tumbling in January. I use 2 double barrel tumblers and dedicate 1 barrel for each stage. My question is this... Every batch I have gotten out of polish has had polish between minute layer cracks that weren't visible going in. I tried scrubbing with toothbrush, cant get it out (never let the rocks dry at all), I've tumbled in Ivory soap, cant get it out and yesterday I bought a ultrasonic cleaner and all that did was take my shine off and make them sticky. (I used water and borax as cleaner) i am so frustrated. More media still the same, less media still the same. Is it the quality of the rough? My husband started me on this for something to do on assignment when we cant get out to explore. He has bought me so much rough that he thought was pretty and I thought was pretty. We've even went into washes here in New Mexico and picked up native agate. What am I doing wrong??? I let brazillian agate tumble until it was almost gone and still minute cracks. Dont want to give it up but very frustrating. Can anyone please help? ??
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nursetumbler
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Post by nursetumbler on Mar 13, 2022 11:46:32 GMT -5
TommyCan you help? I can't add photos so hopefully my description is good enough.
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Tommy
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Post by Tommy on Mar 13, 2022 13:14:54 GMT -5
TommyCan you help? I can't add photos so hopefully my description is good enough. Hi, I feel your frustration and I know you've been searching for answers on this. I am unquestionably better at managing a forum and making cabochons than I am at tumbling - since I started doing lapidary I've probably tumbled maybe three batches of rocks from rough to finished - but I will try. First of all, I can help you with Cloudinary if you want to try again and this is exactly how I can help. Change your forum password to something temporary, send me that temporary password via private message. I will log on as you and install a working Cloudinary account for you to use then I will log off. Log back on and change your forum password again and you will have full use of photo uploading. As you figured out early on you'll need to be in "desktop" view on your phone which is awkward but it's all we have at the moment. I read back through your posts and what stands out at me is it seems like you are trying to go from zero to sixty overnight. The materials that I saw in your posts - calcite, lepidolite, and fluorite are arguably advanced level tumbling materials with difficulty level off the charts. If you are trying to rotary tumble these I wouldn't even know where to start. Just the rock against rock action in the barrel is enough to severely beat up these soft materials and I'm surprised you have anything left after a week. Labradorite is harder but has a whole other set of challenges with cleavage and breakage. and I would also say that it's not a beginner material. The other material you mentioned in a post Brazilian agate is among the hardest of the solid agate materials and I don't understand how it would be possible that someone could tumble grind it away to "almost gone" and still have cracks in it. All that being said, rock tumbling is not a "perfection" art form - our members who win contests start with three pounds of rough rocks and they fuss over them constantly, taking some out, letting others run, touching up others on grinding wheels getting rid of recesses that will never come out or will hold on to grit. In the end they painstakingly pick out five of the best rocks for submission for judging. I know you're not entering a contest but my point is it's a process. Nobody just throws six pounds of rocks in a barrel and runs an entire load to perfection without a lot of fiddling, sorting, and restarting etc. I would say lets get the pictures thing going and then let some of the more experienced tumblers have a more specific look at what's going on with your results.
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nursetumbler
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Post by nursetumbler on Mar 13, 2022 18:37:17 GMT -5
TommyCan you help? I can't add photos so hopefully my description is good enough. Hi, I feel your frustration and I know you've been searching for answers on this. I am unquestionably better at managing a forum and making cabochons than I am at tumbling - since I started doing lapidary I've probably tumbled maybe three batches of rocks from rough to finished - but I will try. First of all, I can help you with Cloudinary if you want to try again and this is exactly how I can help. Change your forum password to something temporary, send me that temporary password via private message. I will log on as you and install a working Cloudinary account for you to use then I will log off. Log back on and change your forum password again and you will have full use of photo uploading. As you figured out early on you'll need to be in "desktop" view on your phone which is awkward but it's all we have at the moment. I read back through your posts and what stands out at me is it seems like you are trying to go from zero to sixty overnight. The materials that I saw in your posts - calcite, lepidolite, and fluorite are arguably advanced level tumbling materials with difficulty level off the charts. If you are trying to rotary tumble these I wouldn't even know where to start. Just the rock against rock action in the barrel is enough to severely beat up these soft materials and I'm surprised you have anything left after a week. Labradorite is harder but has a whole other set of challenges with cleavage and breakage. and I would also say that it's not a beginner material. The other material you mentioned in a post Brazilian agate is among the hardest of the solid agate materials and I don't understand how it would be possible that someone could tumble grind it away to "almost gone" and still have cracks in it. All that being said, rock tumbling is not a "perfection" art form - our members who win contests start with three pounds of rough rocks and they fuss over them constantly, taking some out, letting others run, touching up others on grinding wheels getting rid of recesses that will never come out or will hold on to grit. In the end they painstakingly pick out five of the best rocks for submission for judging. I know you're not entering a contest but my point is it's a process. Nobody just throws six pounds of rocks in a barrel and runs an entire load to perfection without a lot of fiddling, sorting, and restarting etc. I would say lets get the pictures thing going and then let some of the more experienced tumblers have a more specific look at what's going on with your results. TommyMy husband is the one that bought the stuff to start me tumbling as a surprise and something to do in the winter while on assignment. I was asking about orchis calcite, Lepidolite and Florite because that's what he bought, as well as Labradorite. I have not tumbled any of them because I assumed it was difficult once I asked. They are sitting in a box. I have tumbled rocks from the parking lot first to try to figure things out. I have done the agate (it was marked brazillian agate) my tiger eye is in polish and I started pink quarts a week and a half ago. I put the agate back in stage 1 to try get the polish out. I dont have anything to grind bad things out. Talk about advanced rocks, he also bought Apatite, blue sodalite, Amazonite, amethyst, ocean jasper, carnelian and as a kick in the teeth Septarian (they look like tiny bumblebees). I don't know if the rock shop he got the rough from has poor supply chains that agate still "flaking" allowing polish to slip in. I started with 3/4 barrel of agate and when I restarted them yesterday trying to get the flaking out there was less than 1/2 a barrel, so they went in with some of the first batch parking lot stones that are all cracked. I checked Rose quartz today and it keeps breaking more pieces off, the barrel is 3/4 full. Let me figure out user name and password I originally set up and I will get back with you about the photo program. Thank you
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LazerFlash
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The more they over-think the plumbing, the easier it is to stop up the toilet.
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Post by LazerFlash on Mar 13, 2022 22:51:46 GMT -5
nursetumbler , our first couple of tumbles were full of cracks filled with polish. Since we didn't know anything at that time, we figured it had to just be lack of experience. FWIW, our young grand-daughter, (who we gave a tumbler to for Christmas back in 2020 and has done a few batches), actually likes the polish-in-cracks look that some of her rocks end up with.
One thing that helped (a bit) was longer time in stage 1 and 2. I'm currently experimenting with the ultrasonic, so we'll see. Another thing that I've tried, is using a set of dental picks, with a headlamp and a loupe to manually scrape the polish out from stage 3 (500 AO) up. Now that it's gonna be a bit warmer outside, I'm also going to play a bit with pre-shaping using my wet tile saw. I've pre-shaped a couple of small stones with diamond wheels using a Dremel and air grinder with some good success. So, I'm hoping the bigger tool will have a correspondingly good effect.
I also suspect that the quality of rough has a lot to do with it. We had an acronym when I started working in IT back in the last century: GIGO (garbage in, garbage out).
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nursetumbler
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Member since February 2022
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Post by nursetumbler on Mar 14, 2022 6:04:58 GMT -5
nursetumbler , our first couple of tumbles were full of cracks filled with polish. Since we didn't know anything at that time, we figured it had to just be lack of experience. FWIW, our young grand-daughter, (who we gave a tumbler to for Christmas back in 2020 and has done a few batches), actually likes the polish-in-cracks look that some of her rocks end up with.
One thing that helped (a bit) was longer time in stage 1 and 2. I'm currently experimenting with the ultrasonic, so we'll see. Another thing that I've tried, is using a set of dental picks, with a headlamp and a loupe to manually scrape the polish out from stage 3 (500 AO) up. Now that it's gonna be a bit warmer outside, I'm also going to play a bit with pre-shaping using my wet tile saw. I've pre-shaped a couple of small stones with diamond wheels using a Dremel and air grinder with some good success. So, I'm hoping the bigger tool will have a correspondingly good effect.
I also suspect that the quality of rough has a lot to do with it. We had an acronym when I started working in IT back in the last century: GIGO (garbage in, garbage out).
LazerFlashI understand GIGO but how do you know its garbage? The place we wsre getting our rough is a lapidary speciality shop. I guess I did the wrong thing that they had good rough. The last time there i picked through bins previously I just grabbed things. Maybe I will just grab beach and river rock and tumble that until I understand the process or jyst give it all up and put everything up for sale. I don't think my husband thought things through. I dont want to invest in all the fancy and even not fancy equipment. As a nurse I am somewhat a profectionist and failure "most times" isn't in my vocab. I ask questions to learn and I am sure people are "damn her again" we answered that thousands of time. Well I do search before I ask.
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dshanpnw
fully equipped rock polisher
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Post by dshanpnw on Mar 14, 2022 8:02:53 GMT -5
Hello nursetumbler, as soon as I read, polish in the cracks, I immediately thought, get an ultrasonic cleaner, then further on you did just that. I bought one for the exact same reason and it didn't help either, but it didn't take away the shine at all. Man, if I lived in New Mexico I'd be out there looking for agates all the time, you're lucky to live there. A lot of my rocks have cracks with polish in them, but I have greatly improved over a year of tumbling. Some cracks in the rocks never go away especially with petrified wood. My only advice is to keep doing what you are doing, which is tumble the cracks out of the rocks, and inspect them closely with a jeweler's loupe to find the really small cracks that seem to become large when polish gets in them. I try to get rid of all the cracks and pits before moving on to 220 grit, and it does get frustrating. I hope you get the Cloudinary app working and post some photos. Thanks for sharing.
Doug
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nursetumbler
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Post by nursetumbler on Mar 14, 2022 9:09:10 GMT -5
Hello nursetumbler, as soon as I read, polish in the cracks, I immediately thought, get an ultrasonic cleaner, then further on you did just that. I bought one for the exact same reason and it didn't help either, but it didn't take away the shine at all. Man, if I lived in New Mexico I'd be out there looking for agates all the time, you're lucky to live there. A lot of my rocks have cracks with polish in them, but I have greatly improved over a year of tumbling. Some cracks in the rocks never go away especially with petrified wood. My only advice is to keep doing what you are doing, which is tumble the cracks out of the rocks, and inspect them closely with a jeweler's loupe to find the really small cracks that seem to become large when polish gets in them. I try to get rid of all the cracks and pits before moving on to 220 grit, and it does get frustrating. I hope you get the Cloudinary app working and post some photos. Thanks for sharing. Doug Hi Doug I have a jewlers loop but inspection won't do me any good as I dont have anything to grind stuff out with. I read someone was adding Metamucil to make his polish into a suspension gel. I don't know. Bringing science into the mix I had been putting the rocks in in warm water, science says things swell in heat (open the cracks) so i whink I am going to try to Ice the rocks before putting them in the next grit after cleaning. Can't hurt can it??? Tommy said I am trying to go from 0-60 all at once. I'm not but I am using what my husband gave me, well not any more the "difficult stuff" will stay in the box until I decide if I will continue. Can you private message me your location? I am a travel nurse so I dont live in New Mexico, Michigan is my home base. We leave for next assignment Saturday. If we go through whenever you live I would be more than happy to share some New Mexico agate with you. Thanks for not making me feel like to much of an idiot Kelly
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Tommy
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Post by Tommy on Mar 14, 2022 9:40:20 GMT -5
Tommy said I am trying to go from 0-60 all at once. I'm not but I am using what my husband gave me, well not any more the "difficult stuff" will stay in the box until I decide if I will continue. I meant that in the best way possible in regards to the difficult materials you have posted about but you clarified that nicely thanks. Still, my best advice (other than let me help you fix the photo uploading issue) would be to just slow down a bit and maybe start with a batch of jaspers which are one of the most forgiving rocks to tumble. Get a few successes under your belt to gain some confidence then start looking at the more challenging materials.
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nursetumbler
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Post by nursetumbler on Mar 14, 2022 9:48:00 GMT -5
Tommy said I am trying to go from 0-60 all at once. I'm not but I am using what my husband gave me, well not any more the "difficult stuff" will stay in the box until I decide if I will continue. I meant that in the best way possible in regards to the difficult materials you have posted about but you clarified that nicely thanks. Still, my best advice (other than let me help you fix the photo uploading issue) would be to just slow down a bit and maybe start with a batch of jaspers which are one of the most forgiving rocks to tumble. Get a few successes under your belt to gain some confidence then start looking at the more challenging materials. Tommy I didn't mean that comment to be derogatory either. I knew what you meant. I have been more than once I go from 0-60 I need to slow down. 🙂 I will seek out some jasper to tumble when I get to my next assignment. If you have any suggestions on what and where to get some I'd appreciate it. Kelly
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waterboysh
spending too much on rocks
Member since April 2021
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Post by waterboysh on Mar 14, 2022 10:47:34 GMT -5
I read someone was adding Metamucil to make his polish into a suspension gel. I don't know. You may have seen me mention that recently in this thread, titled "Borax". I wanted to get away from using Borax because I don't really have anywhere to dump my used water than my lawn (I let the slurry settle in a 5 gallon bucket and use a cup to scoop out the water. After a while I let it dry out completely and dump the "brick" into the trash) and I didn't want Borax to kill the lawn. That said, I was also talking about a vibratory tumbler, not a rotary. I got the idea from ingawh from this post from a few years ago. She uses hand soap and psyllium powder (That's what Metamucil is) along with the polish. I just finished my first batch myself using this method and it worked great. But, I don't know how well this would help in a rotary tumbler. A vibratory tumbler uses very little water. As in, the stones are wet but there is no standing water at all. So the soap and psyllium make a gel-like doughy slurry. In a rotary, I suspect it would just make a frothy, bubbly mess considering the barrel uses much more water. If you look at the bottom of the Borax post, you'll see a video I posted showing what the slurry looks like.
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nursetumbler
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Post by nursetumbler on Mar 14, 2022 11:10:57 GMT -5
I read someone was adding Metamucil to make his polish into a suspension gel. I don't know. You may have seen me mention that recently in this thread, titled "Borax". I wanted to get away from using Borax because I don't really have anywhere to dump my used water than my lawn (I let the slurry settle in a 5 gallon bucket and use a cup to scoop out the water. After a while I let it dry out completely and dump the "brick" into the trash) and I didn't want Borax to kill the lawn. That said, I was also talking about a vibratory tumbler, not a rotary. I got the idea from ingawh from this post from a few years ago. She uses hand soap and psyllium powder (That's what Metamucil is) along with the polish. I just finished my first batch myself using this method and it worked great. But, I don't know how well this would help in a rotary tumbler. A vibratory tumbler uses very little water. As in, the stones are wet but there is no standing water at all. So the soap and psyllium make a gel-like doughy slurry. In a rotary, I suspect it would just make a frothy, bubbly mess considering the barrel uses much more water. If you look at the bottom of the Borax post, you'll see a video I posted showing what the slurry looks like. Thank you
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ingawh
starting to spend too much on rocks
The rock wants to shine, I just help it get there
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Post by ingawh on Mar 14, 2022 11:50:01 GMT -5
I read someone was adding Metamucil to make his polish into a suspension gel. I don't know. You may have seen me mention that recently in this thread, titled "Borax". I wanted to get away from using Borax because I don't really have anywhere to dump my used water than my lawn (I let the slurry settle in a 5 gallon bucket and use a cup to scoop out the water. After a while I let it dry out completely and dump the "brick" into the trash) and I didn't want Borax to kill the lawn. That said, I was also talking about a vibratory tumbler, not a rotary. I got the idea from ingawh from this post from a few years ago. She uses hand soap and psyllium powder (That's what Metamucil is) along with the polish. I just finished my first batch myself using this method and it worked great. But, I don't know how well this would help in a rotary tumbler. A vibratory tumbler uses very little water. As in, the stones are wet but there is no standing water at all. So the soap and psyllium make a gel-like doughy slurry. In a rotary, I suspect it would just make a frothy, bubbly mess considering the barrel uses much more water. If you look at the bottom of the Borax post, you'll see a video I posted showing what the slurry looks like. When I have to polish something that does not fit in the vibratory tumbler, I DO use psyllium in the rotary tumbler as well. BUT, since the process has to run for a week or more, there is time for biological action to build up gas because psyllium is a natural fiber. Therefore, I add a couple teaspoons of bleach to the slurry to kill the bio-action. The psyllium does the same job - thickens the slurry to guard against bruising and chipping AND makes the grit want to stay in the slurry, not the pits of the stones. Spraying the stones with the garden hose nozzle, you can see slurry seem to pop out of pits and crevices because the slurry would rather adhere to itself - stick together - than stick on the rock. I recommend using sugar-free Metamucil, or Costco's Kirkland brand of the same thing, if you want to give psyllium a try. Just put up with the nice orange scent. :-) If you have something like that around the house, you can even use the kind with sugar in it - just use a little bit more. In a six pound barrel, about a teaspoon of the sugar-free kind, (or a couple teaspoons of the kind with sugar) ought to work, but you may have to experiment. And don't forget the teaspoon or two of bleach. Best wishes.
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nursetumbler
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Post by nursetumbler on Mar 14, 2022 18:47:29 GMT -5
You may have seen me mention that recently in this thread, titled "Borax". I wanted to get away from using Borax because I don't really have anywhere to dump my used water than my lawn (I let the slurry settle in a 5 gallon bucket and use a cup to scoop out the water. After a while I let it dry out completely and dump the "brick" into the trash) and I didn't want Borax to kill the lawn. That said, I was also talking about a vibratory tumbler, not a rotary. I got the idea from ingawh from this post from a few years ago. She uses hand soap and psyllium powder (That's what Metamucil is) along with the polish. I just finished my first batch myself using this method and it worked great. But, I don't know how well this would help in a rotary tumbler. A vibratory tumbler uses very little water. As in, the stones are wet but there is no standing water at all. So the soap and psyllium make a gel-like doughy slurry. In a rotary, I suspect it would just make a frothy, bubbly mess considering the barrel uses much more water. If you look at the bottom of the Borax post, you'll see a video I posted showing what the slurry looks like. When I have to polish something that does not fit in the vibratory tumbler, I DO use psyllium in the rotary tumbler as well. BUT, since the process has to run for a week or more, there is time for biological action to build up gas because psyllium is a natural fiber. Therefore, I add a couple teaspoons of bleach to the slurry to kill the bio-action. The psyllium does the same job - thickens the slurry to guard against bruising and chipping AND makes the grit want to stay in the slurry, not the pits of the stones. Spraying the stones with the garden hose nozzle, you can see slurry seem to pop out of pits and crevices because the slurry would rather adhere to itself - stick together - than stick on the rock. I recommend using sugar-free Metamucil, or Costco's Kirkland brand of the same thing, if you want to give psyllium a try. Just put up with the nice orange scent. :-) If you have something like that around the house, you can even use the kind with sugar in it - just use a little bit more. In a six pound barrel, a teaspoon of sugar free, and a couple teaspoons with sugar, ought to work, but you may have to experiment. And don't forget the teaspoon or two of bleach. Best wishes. ingawhThank you. So for a 6# barrel you use 1 tsp sugarfree AND 3 tsp of sugared with bleach? Thank you. Does tumbling take longer with the gel?
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ingawh
starting to spend too much on rocks
The rock wants to shine, I just help it get there
Member since February 2011
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Post by ingawh on Mar 14, 2022 23:00:57 GMT -5
When I have to polish something that does not fit in the vibratory tumbler, I DO use psyllium in the rotary tumbler as well. BUT, since the process has to run for a week or more, there is time for biological action to build up gas because psyllium is a natural fiber. Therefore, I add a couple teaspoons of bleach to the slurry to kill the bio-action. The psyllium does the same job - thickens the slurry to guard against bruising and chipping AND makes the grit want to stay in the slurry, not the pits of the stones. Spraying the stones with the garden hose nozzle, you can see slurry seem to pop out of pits and crevices because the slurry would rather adhere to itself - stick together - than stick on the rock. I recommend using sugar-free Metamucil, or Costco's Kirkland brand of the same thing, if you want to give psyllium a try. Just put up with the nice orange scent. :-) If you have something like that around the house, you can even use the kind with sugar in it - just use a little bit more. In a six pound barrel, a teaspoon of sugar free, and a couple teaspoons with sugar, ought to work, but you may have to experiment. And don't forget the teaspoon or two of bleach. Best wishes. ingawhThank you. So for a 6# barrel you use 1 tsp sugarfree AND 3 tsp of sugared with bleach? Thank you. Does tumbling take longer with the gel? Just one or the other (sugared OR sugar free). I edited my post above to make it clearer. I prefer the sugar free, and since the sugar takes up a fair amount of space, a smaller amount when using sugar-free works fine. A little bit of bleach is required with either kind. I have never found that the fiber slowed down the polish. In my experience, what slows down the polish are things like plastic pellets and fabric scraps used to try and buffer the stones - but they also reduce the contact that is critical for the polishing effect. So I prefer hard, well-polished media, in a nice thick slurry. That allows for both the right amount of buffering, while still providing contact firm enough to impart a shine. Just as an alternative to the psyllium thickener: I have a friend who reuses his polish slurry indefinitely, and it is as thick as pea soup. He does not add a thicker - it's just lots of cheap old tripoli polish and the build up of ground-up rocks from hundreds of polish cycles. He also uses lots of agate/quartz media, and he gets a brilliant shine - including on obsidian. Tripoli is comparatively cheap, and if you reuse it, only replenishing for what has come away on the stones and gotten rinsed off, its ultimately cheap as dirt to do it this way (in terms of what you spent on polish grit, anyway). I don't use the rotary barrels for polishing often enough to keep a vat of used tripoli-based polish around. If you think you will be polishing in the rotary barrel regularly, you could try his method. You should then skip the psyllium (because it will begin to rot and get stinky, or you have to keep adding bleach - no point if you've used enough tripoli). To try this method get yourself a big tub of tripoli and mix up a slurry that is literally about the consistency of pea soup, then pour it over your polish-ready stones and media. My friend tends to fill his barrels high enough to cover the stones. When done, carefully strain the slurry into a clean, new bucket with a lid, ready to reuse on your next polish batch. Just add more tripoli and/or water as needed to maintain the consistency. My friend does this on an industrial scale - he has over rotary tumblers 50 tumblers going at one time, and gets legendary results. You may choose not to fill your barrels and full as he does - he has a massive motor running the whole operation, but an over-full barrel can be hard on a small tumbler motor. I'll post pics of his set up below...
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ingawh
starting to spend too much on rocks
The rock wants to shine, I just help it get there
Member since February 2011
Posts: 194
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Post by ingawh on Mar 14, 2022 23:04:10 GMT -5
In case a visual is helpful, this is the setup of my friend who polishes rocks professionally with just the super-thick, reused tripoli. My friend's polishing tumblers Some of his larger tumblers for shaping rough
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nursetumbler
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Post by nursetumbler on Mar 14, 2022 23:29:50 GMT -5
ingawhThank you. So for a 6# barrel you use 1 tsp sugarfree AND 3 tsp of sugared with bleach? Thank you. Does tumbling take longer with the gel? Just one or the other (sugared OR sugar free). I edited my post above to make it clearer. I prefer the sugar free, and since the sugar takes up a fair amount of space, a smaller amount when using sugar-free works fine. A little bit of bleach is required with either kind. I have never found that the fiber slowed down the polish. In my experience, what slows down the polish are things like plastic pellets and fabric scraps used to try and buffer the stones - but they also reduce the contact that is critical for the polishing effect. So I prefer hard, well-polished media, in a nice thick slurry. That allows for both the right amount of buffering, while still providing contact firm enough to impart a shine. Just as an alternative to the psyllium thickener: I have a friend who reuses his polish slurry indefinitely, and it is as thick as pea soup. He does not add a thicker - it's just lots of cheap old tripoli polish and the build up of ground-up rocks from hundreds of polish cycles. He also uses lots of agate/quartz media, and he gets a brilliant shine - including on obsidian. Tripoli is comparatively cheap, and if you reuse it, only replenishing for what has come away on the stones and gotten rinsed off, its ultimately cheap as dirt to do it this way (in terms of what you spent on polish grit, anyway). I don't use the rotary barrels for polishing often enough to keep a vat of used tripoli-based polish around. If you think you will be polishing in the rotary barrel regularly, you could try his method. You should then skip the psyllium (because it will begin to rot and get stinky, or you have to keep adding bleach - no point if you've used enough tripoli). To try this method get yourself a big tub of tripoli and mix up a slurry that is literally about the consistency of pea soup, then pour it over your polish-ready stones and media. My friend tends to fill his barrels high enough to cover the stones. When done, carefully strain the slurry into a clean, new bucket with a lid, ready to reuse on your next polish batch. Just add more tripoli and/or water as needed to maintain the consistency. My friend does this on an industrial scale - he has over rotary tumblers 50 tumblers going at one time, and gets legendary results. You may choose not to fill your barrels and full as he does - he has a massive motor running the whole operation, but an over-full barrel can be hard on a small tumbler motor. I'll post pics of his set up below... Thank you ingawh. I will have my husband look into it for me.
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nursetumbler
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Post by nursetumbler on Mar 15, 2022 10:06:45 GMT -5
TommyI want to apologize, I told you I hadn't polished any calcite. It didn't dawn on me what orchid calcite was, duh. I have tumbled that. It was the rock that prompted this thread. I did the hot water science trick on it last night (I never let it dry out, it stayed in water) all but a couple now are visibly without polish in cracks. Fluke, probably but it worked with the orchid. I did alot of research with past posts about orchid. I did a lot of the suggestions. None broke, started in stage 2 (120-220) checked daily, used baking soda in each step (someone said higher pH calcite dissolved less). I knew I wouldn't get a high gloss shine but I did get a gorgeous satin. Again sorry I mis spoke to you. Have you figured out the Cloudinary? I could post photos.
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Tommy
Administrator
Member since January 2013
Posts: 12,936
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Post by Tommy on Mar 15, 2022 11:02:37 GMT -5
TommyI want to apologize, I told you I hadn't polished any calcite. Hi, no worries and definitely no apology is necessary. I understand that you were getting frustrated with it and I'm glad you are getting solid advice from folks here and innovating and making some progress and feeling a bit better about how it's going. I posted exact instructions for you to follow that would allow me to install a fully functioning connection to 3rd party photo host Cloudinary.com on your account. I will repost those instructions here.
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Post by greig on Mar 15, 2022 11:59:06 GMT -5
The comments are all good. My two cents is the best way to stop polish in cracks or scratches is backup a stage or two and remove the imperfections. Also, how long did you do stage 3 pre-polish? How long did you do burnish? A second solution might be a second burnish to continue to wash out the unwanted polish
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