'The writing which corresponds to mineral' 68

  1. 2008/03/20 Tips for Successful Rock Tumbling
  2. 2008/03/20 How to Pan for Gold
  3. 2007/12/10 Large Gold/Quartz Specimens Found in Alaska
  4. 2007/12/10 Large Nuggets Found in Alaska by Non-Commercial Operators
  5. 2007/12/10 Alaska's Largest Gold Nuggets - The Top 20
  6. 2007/12/10 Gotland: Treasure Capital Of The World
  7. 2007/12/10 Higher Zinc Price Creates Opportunity
  8. 2007/12/10 BLM Launches Mining Claim Records Viewer
  9. 2007/12/10 Editorial: Montana’s Controversial Rock Creek Mine
  10. 2007/12/10 Diamond Exploration and Mining Heating Up
  11. 2007/12/10 Lawsuit to Challenge New Forest Service Regulations
  12. 2007/12/10 Buell Park Pipe, Arizona
  13. 2007/12/10 Prospectors Unite in Washington State
  14. 2007/12/10 Dredging After the Flood
  15. 2007/12/10 Restoring the Rule of Law to US Mining
  16. 2007/12/10 A Guide to Overlooked Gold Deposits--Pt 4
  17. 2007/12/10 Millsite Opinion Overturned!
  18. 2007/12/10 Roll-Front Uranium Deposits
  19. 2007/12/10 State Rivers Closed to Prospecting in
  20. 2007/12/09 House Resources Committee Addresses
  21. 2007/12/09 Prospecting for Iron in Alaska
  22. 2007/12/09 Melman on Gold & Silver (2)
  23. 2007/12/09 A Unique Prospecting Method
  24. 2007/12/09 Gold in Gossan
  25. 2007/12/09 Goldfield, Nevada
  26. 2007/12/09 Melman on Gold & Silver
  27. 2007/12/09 Original Sixteen-to-One Mine Fights On
  28. 2007/12/09 Gold Garbage: Scams New & Old
  29. 2007/12/09 The Professional Nuggetshooter
  30. 2007/12/09 The Greenhorn
  31. 2007/12/09 Piedmont Gold
  32. 2007/12/09 The Gold of “Eldorado Canyon”
  33. 2007/12/09 Picks & Pans: Mining Tungsten Ore--A Case History
  34. 2007/12/09 The California State Nugget
  35. 2007/12/09 Placer Gold in New Mexico
  36. 2007/12/09 Metal Detecting within the Cordillera for Gold Placers
  37. 2007/12/09 Gold in Texas
  38. 2007/12/09 Just recently found this small nugget laying right on top of a Granite type bedrock in a completely new area.
  39. 2007/12/09 3 Dwt gold nugget found at 16-inch during the field testing stages of the Minelab GPX-4000 Metal Detector.
  40. 2007/12/09 Another smaller nugget lying on decomposed bedrock.
  41. 2007/12/09 First of three small nuggets recovered May 8th in the Bradshaw Mountain Range with a Minelab GP3500 metal detector & Coiltek Searchcoil.
  42. 2007/12/09 Another small gold nugget recovered May 8th with the GP3500 metal detector.
  43. 2007/12/09 With the new Minelab GP3500 I was able to visually see this gold nugget once the detector responded over it.
  44. 2007/12/09 This nugget was approx. 40 ounces and was lying in the Western Australian Outback.
  45. 2007/12/09 Two nuggets just over 1/4 ounce total recovered dredging an Alaskan Creek.
  46. 2007/12/09 5.81 ounce gold nugget recovered at Ganes Creek, Alaska by Bob (AK).
  47. 2007/12/09 I personally dug down to the top of this gold nugget as you can see in the picture.
  48. 2007/12/09 Small gold nugget wedged in a narrow bedrock crevice.
  49. 2007/12/09 Small solid gold nugget visually seen after the Minelab GP3000 "beeped" on it.
  50. 2007/12/09 3 Dwt gold nugget wedged in some bedrock.
  51. 2007/12/09 Nice gold nugget stuck in a bedrock crack.
  52. 2007/12/09 2 Dwt gold nugget lying on Schist bedrock.
  53. 2007/12/09 Notice the 3 small gold nuggets lying just above bedrock on a clay layer
  54. 2007/12/09 This Dwt gold nugget was lying just off the main wash on a small bench
  55. 2007/12/09 This nice 1.5 Dwt gold nugget was discovered also in the Bradshaw Mountain Region
  56. 2007/12/09 Nice 1/4 ouncer wedged within the bedrock.
  57. 2007/12/09 I actually was walking down a small wash and seen this piece glowing on the bedrock during one hot, summer day.
  58. 2007/10/04 Small gold nugget found on schist bedrock
  59. 2007/10/04 Very small gold nugget found lying right on top of the schist bedrock
  60. 2007/10/04 One of gold nugget finds recently
  61. 2007/10/03 Really smooth, small gold nugget lying on exposed bedrock
  62. 2007/10/03 A nice 2.5 Dwt gold nugget lying just below the surface on bedrock
  63. 2007/10/03 Small gold nugget encased in caliche
  64. 2007/10/03 A nice gold nugget exposed under several inches of material
  65. 2007/10/03 This small gold nugget was wedged in a Schist crevice
  66. 2007/10/03 Another nice little gold nugget lying on decomposed bedrock
  67. 2007/10/02 Tips on becoming a better Nuggetshooter
  68. 2007/10/02 What's Placer Gold Worth?

Tips for Successful Rock Tumbling

Gold/Mineral/Mining 2008/03/20 08:31

by Steve Herschbach

Polishing gives rocks a permanent "wet" look. Choose material that looks good when wetted. Rocks that are unimpressive when "previewed" wet will not look any better once polished. As they say in the computer world, "garbage-in, garbage-out".

Beach or gravel bar stones are good beginners material. These stones are already rounded and usually represent relatively hard rocks. Avoid mixing hard and soft stones together, and try to avoid rocks with deep pits or crevices. Rocks with very deep pits and crevices should normally be split along the depression. Extremely rough material can also be pre-shaped on a grinding wheel.

The initial tumbling stage with coarse grit is where the rock is smoothed to its final form. Subsequent steps simply polish the surface of the stone. Keep tumbling stones with coarse grit until they reach the desired degree of smoothness. This may add extra weeks to the tumbling process, particularly when starting with rough, broken material. Harder material will also take extra time. The tumbler should be cleaned of ground waste periodically. Extra coarse grit should be added as it is wore out. Continue this process until the rocks are in the final form you desire. Then proceed to the fine grit and polish stages.

I use two tumblers; a 12 lb. and a 3 lb. unit. The 12-pound tumbler runs exclusively with coarse grit. I periodically clean the barrel and remove stones that have reached my desired goal. I am looking for perfect smoothness with absolutely no pitting. I remove stones that have reached this state and put them in the 3 pound barrel. I add extra rock to the 12-pound unit to make us for loss, and add extra grit as needed. I usually buy my coarse grit in 5 pound containers, and use much more of it than the fine grit or polish. When I get enough perfect stones to fill the 3-pound tumbler 2/3 to 3/4 full, I proceed to the fine grit and polish stages with these stones separately.

When proceeding to the polish stage, it is extremely important that every single particle of grit be removed from the material. This is relatively easy with perfectly smoothed stones, but material that has pitting or crevices should be run through repeated short tumble and rinse cycles to dislodge any remaining grit. Clean the barrel carefully for the same reason. Even a few particles of grit making it into your tumbler during the polish stage will prevent a good polish.

My 12-pound tumbler will run for many weeks, sometimes months, with stones only removed when they reach the desired state of "perfection". Starting with hammer broken, hard material such as agate can cause this process to be a long one, requiring much patience. Pre-rounding with a grinder can speed the process considerably. The final run with the 3-pound tumbler, however, only takes 1-2 weeks. My final product consists of beautifully polished stones with a glass smooth finish.

Have fun!

Copyright 2000 Herschbach Enterprises

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