Advice with crack/fracture repair |
Advice with crack/fracture repair |
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#1
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![]() Shovel Buster! ![]() ![]() ![]() Group: Members Posts: 106 Joined: 22-July 10 From: Whitehall, Pennsylvania Member No.: 7,317 ![]() |
Just attended 2nd class of a "Beginning Cabochon" course I am taking and I am learning a lot
![]() ![]() I might make a smaller piece from this cracked cab, maybe a guitar pick! ![]() I have 2 questions: 1. If I choose to make a guitar pick and trim it down to guitar pick size (cutting off the fractured portion), I need to thin the piece since it is thin for a cabochon but too thick to be a guitar pick even for me. I like thicker picks 2-3mm range but the cab is now 5mm. Do I thin it on a flat lap or some other method? 2. I probably will not attempt to repair the fracture but want to know the best ways to repair cracks and fractures because I am sure I will encounter them in the future. I have not worked with stone prior to last week but think a few methods of repair could work. I would think that heating a stone opens a fracture and would also further liquify an epoxy upon contact and allow it to fully seep in. Is heating a stone to repair it this way a good idea? What type of epoxy is good for use on stone? Another method is to fully submerge the piece in heated liquid plastic to let it fill a crack or fracture. These are just theories based on working with other materials so I do not know how well they would work on stone. Any advice, tips, experiences? ![]() Thanks! |
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#2
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![]() Shovel Buster! ![]() ![]() ![]() Group: Members Posts: 60 Joined: 4-October 10 From: Sweden Member No.: 7,387 ![]() |
No I'm afraid I'm not even familiar with that camera, for taking my pics I just use my cell phone.
-------------------- Geologists are gneiss, tuff and a little wacke.
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