Metalworking (rec.crafts.metalworking) Discuss various aspects of working with metal, such as machining, welding, metal joining, screwing, casting, hardening/tempering, blacksmithing/forging, spinning and hammer work, sheet metal work.

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Default Do not buy a Harbor Freight "rock tumbler"

Unless you want it to break after 3 weeks, that is. What a POS. I
bought it to show what rock tubling is, to my kids. I sort of knew
that it is junk, and bought an extended warranty, but all it give me
is the right to get another POS.

i
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"Ignoramus5816" wrote in message
...
Unless you want it to break after 3 weeks, that is. What a POS. I
bought it to show what rock tubling is, to my kids. I sort of knew
that it is junk, and bought an extended warranty, but all it give me
is the right to get another POS.


I went through the usual labour pains before I decided on mine. Rather than
going the cheap way I splashed out on Thumler's UV10 (Industrial) and so far
I have not regretted it.
BTW do not use cat litter silica crystals wet...or dry for that matter (the
dust is awful).

--
Michael Koblic,
Campbell River, BC


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On Wed, 26 May 2010 17:27:26 -0500, Ignoramus5816
wrote:

Unless you want it to break after 3 weeks, that is. What a POS. I
bought it to show what rock tubling is, to my kids. I sort of knew
that it is junk, and bought an extended warranty, but all it give me
is the right to get another POS.

i



Take them out to where the water is. Took mine just on a side trip and
there are all kinds of colored volcanic glass in Escanaba Mi.

Lost me Ig. You had a mill stuck in a corner with your lyon tool box
and then getting a bigger mill, but you buy a broken china rock ...

Extended warranty! You can reach little no neck monsters from Ill.?
No more MIG fighters? Or AK's?

SW
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Michael Koblic wrote:

"Ignoramus5816" wrote in message
...
Unless you want it to break after 3 weeks, that is. What a POS. I
bought it to show what rock tubling is, to my kids. I sort of knew
that it is junk, and bought an extended warranty, but all it give me
is the right to get another POS.


I went through the usual labour pains before I decided on mine. Rather
than going the cheap way I splashed out on Thumler's UV10 (Industrial)
and so far I have not regretted it.
BTW do not use cat litter silica crystals wet...or dry for that matter
(the dust is awful).




I just chuck a plastic container in my lathe that has a couple of wood
slats mounted on the inside of it and run it at the slowest speed. I
use the tailstock to hold the lid on. It also works great for deburring
parts.

John
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isn't this a metal working group? to make a rock tumbler all you need is an
old BBQ motor, a couple of steel bars that you cover with tight fitting
flexible hose, and some bracketry to hold the mess - direct drive one of the
rods with the BBQ motor. use any plastic jar for the tumbling jar.

"Ignoramus5816" wrote in message
...
Unless you want it to break after 3 weeks, that is. What a POS. I
bought it to show what rock tubling is, to my kids. I sort of knew
that it is junk, and bought an extended warranty, but all it give me
is the right to get another POS.

i




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Default Do not buy a Harbor Freight "rock tumbler"

"Bill Noble" fired this volley in
:

isn't this a metal working group? to make a rock tumbler all you need
is an old BBQ motor, a couple of steel bars that you cover with tight
fitting flexible hose, and some bracketry to hold the mess - direct
drive one of the rods with the BBQ motor. use any plastic jar for the
tumbling jar.


Right. Read something on Ball Milling. There's something more to it
than what Horrible Fright might tell... and it doesn't take two weeks to
"tumble" a bunch of dull, worthless rocks into shiny, worthless rocks --
It takes about 24-36 hours in an optimized mill. In fact, it takes about
the same time to change loads and wash between grit charges as it does to
do the actual grinding. If you wanted to do the whole job in three days,
you'd be working after midnight two of them.

LLoyd (who _actually_ wrote the book on the subject)
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On 2010-05-27, Lloyd E. Sponenburgh lloydspinsidemindspring.com wrote:
"Bill Noble" fired this volley in
:

isn't this a metal working group? to make a rock tumbler all you need
is an old BBQ motor, a couple of steel bars that you cover with tight
fitting flexible hose, and some bracketry to hold the mess - direct
drive one of the rods with the BBQ motor. use any plastic jar for the
tumbling jar.


Right. Read something on Ball Milling. There's something more to it
than what Horrible Fright might tell... and it doesn't take two weeks to
"tumble" a bunch of dull, worthless rocks into shiny, worthless rocks --
It takes about 24-36 hours in an optimized mill. In fact, it takes about
the same time to change loads and wash between grit charges as it does to
do the actual grinding. If you wanted to do the whole job in three days,
you'd be working after midnight two of them.

LLoyd (who _actually_ wrote the book on the subject)


Lloyd, I am intrigued, what is that book?

i
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Default Do not buy a Harbor Freight "rock tumbler"

Ignoramus5816 writes:

Lloyd, I am intrigued, what is that book?


http://www.amazon.com/dp/B00229ZI7W

*The* book that transformed the hobby (and industry) of pyrotechnics.
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"Ignoramus5816" wrote in message
...
Unless you want it to break after 3 weeks, that is. What a POS. I
bought it to show what rock tubling is, to my kids. I sort of knew
that it is junk, and bought an extended warranty, but all it give me
is the right to get another POS.

i


I can't believe you bought one when you could have cobbled something
together in half an hour from your junk pile.


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On 2010-05-27, Buerste wrote:

"Ignoramus5816" wrote in message
...
Unless you want it to break after 3 weeks, that is. What a POS. I
bought it to show what rock tubling is, to my kids. I sort of knew
that it is junk, and bought an extended warranty, but all it give me
is the right to get another POS.

i


I can't believe you bought one when you could have cobbled something
together in half an hour from your junk pile.


The mechanism is straightforward, but it is not as easy to make a
rubber barrel.

i


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Ignoramus12281 wrote:

The mechanism is straightforward, but it is not as easy to make a
rubber barrel.


Sections of a truck inner-tube?

Jon


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On 2010-05-27, Michael Koblic wrote:

"Ignoramus5816" wrote in message
...
Unless you want it to break after 3 weeks, that is. What a POS. I
bought it to show what rock tubling is, to my kids. I sort of knew
that it is junk, and bought an extended warranty, but all it give me
is the right to get another POS.


I went through the usual labour pains before I decided on mine. Rather than
going the cheap way I splashed out on Thumler's UV10 (Industrial) and so far
I have not regretted it.
BTW do not use cat litter silica crystals wet...or dry for that matter (the
dust is awful).


That is a vibratory tumbler, and mine was a rotary.

I actually do have a vibratory tumbler, called Nova 501HT (see
novafinishing.com). It is not as good for rounding rocks,
however. Otherwise it is great.

http://www.novafinishing.com/products.html
http://www.novafinishing.com/prices.html

i
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"Jon Danniken" wrote in message
...
Ignoramus12281 wrote:

The mechanism is straightforward, but it is not as easy to make a
rubber barrel.


Sections of a truck inner-tube?

Jon

No, A whole tire!
http://www.acc.umu.se/~widmark/lwtrumle.html

http://www.acc.umu.se/~widmark/lwtrumld.html

Steve


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On 2010-05-27, Up North wrote:

"Jon Danniken" wrote in message
...
Ignoramus12281 wrote:

The mechanism is straightforward, but it is not as easy to make a
rubber barrel.


Sections of a truck inner-tube?

Jon

No, A whole tire!
http://www.acc.umu.se/~widmark/lwtrumle.html

http://www.acc.umu.se/~widmark/lwtrumld.html


It looks cute in a redneck kind of way, but in actuality it is very
inconvenient and the tire wears out.

i
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No, A whole tire!
http://www.acc.umu.se/~widmark/lwtrumle.html

http://www.acc.umu.se/~widmark/lwtrumld.html


It looks cute in a redneck kind of way, but in actuality it is very
inconvenient and the tire wears out.

i

When I was working in the sand and gravel business a salesman gave me a
sample of a urethane sheet that had an adhesive back on it. The product was
available in different durometer ratings and thickness'. Once applied to a
piece of steel it was extremely difficult to break the bond between the two.
I don't recall the manufacturer of the product. It seems like the ideal
thing to line a barrel with.
Steve




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On 2010-05-27, Up North wrote:
When I was working in the sand and gravel business a salesman gave me a
sample of a urethane sheet that had an adhesive back on it. The product was
available in different durometer ratings and thickness'. Once applied to a
piece of steel it was extremely difficult to break the bond between the two.
I don't recall the manufacturer of the product. It seems like the ideal
thing to line a barrel with.


Yes, that would be cool.

Anyway, I actually do have a 1/3 HP "real" tumbler from an old dirty
factory, it is just a bit too big. I wanted to have a little tumbler
that would be more friendly to my kids.

i
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On Thu, 27 May 2010 10:02:27 -0500, Ignoramus12281
wrote:

On 2010-05-27, Up North wrote:

"Jon Danniken" wrote in message
...
Ignoramus12281 wrote:

The mechanism is straightforward, but it is not as easy to make a
rubber barrel.

Sections of a truck inner-tube?

Jon

No, A whole tire!
http://www.acc.umu.se/~widmark/lwtrumle.html

http://www.acc.umu.se/~widmark/lwtrumld.html


It looks cute in a redneck kind of way, but in actuality it is very
inconvenient and the tire wears out.

i


Barrels of rock tumblers ALWAYS wear out. Particularly with 50 lbs rock
in them.

Gunner

--


"First Law of Leftist Debate
The more you present a leftist with factual evidence
that is counter to his preconceived world view and the
more difficult it becomes for him to refute it without
losing face the chance of him calling you a racist, bigot,
homophobe approaches infinity.

This is despite the thread you are in having not mentioned
race or sexual preference in any way that is relevant to
the subject." Grey Ghost
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McMaster Carr sells the rubber barrels for the Thumler's Tumbler, in 2
different sizes.

RogerN


"Ignoramus12281" wrote in message
...
On 2010-05-27, Buerste wrote:

"Ignoramus5816" wrote in message
...
Unless you want it to break after 3 weeks, that is. What a POS. I
bought it to show what rock tubling is, to my kids. I sort of knew
that it is junk, and bought an extended warranty, but all it give me
is the right to get another POS.

i


I can't believe you bought one when you could have cobbled something
together in half an hour from your junk pile.


The mechanism is straightforward, but it is not as easy to make a
rubber barrel.

i



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"Ignoramus12281" wrote in message
...
On 2010-05-27, Michael Koblic wrote:

"Ignoramus5816" wrote in message
...
Unless you want it to break after 3 weeks, that is. What a POS. I
bought it to show what rock tubling is, to my kids. I sort of knew
that it is junk, and bought an extended warranty, but all it give me
is the right to get another POS.


I went through the usual labour pains before I decided on mine. Rather
than
going the cheap way I splashed out on Thumler's UV10 (Industrial) and so
far
I have not regretted it.
BTW do not use cat litter silica crystals wet...or dry for that matter
(the
dust is awful).


That is a vibratory tumbler, and mine was a rotary.

I actually do have a vibratory tumbler, called Nova 501HT (see
novafinishing.com). It is not as good for rounding rocks,
however. Otherwise it is great.

http://www.novafinishing.com/products.html
http://www.novafinishing.com/prices.html


Ah. Several people sent me links to the HF vibratory tumbler. I did not know
they did the rotary ones too.

But thanks for the links. That Nova 501HT looks a serious machine. BTW is
this where you get your media from? $1.50 +/- per lb of ceramics is very
good. I wonder if they ship to Canada...

--
Michael Koblic,
Campbell River, BC

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On 2010-05-28, Michael Koblic wrote:

"Ignoramus12281" wrote in message
...
On 2010-05-27, Michael Koblic wrote:

"Ignoramus5816" wrote in message
...
Unless you want it to break after 3 weeks, that is. What a POS. I
bought it to show what rock tubling is, to my kids. I sort of knew
that it is junk, and bought an extended warranty, but all it give me
is the right to get another POS.


I went through the usual labour pains before I decided on mine. Rather
than
going the cheap way I splashed out on Thumler's UV10 (Industrial) and so
far
I have not regretted it.
BTW do not use cat litter silica crystals wet...or dry for that matter
(the
dust is awful).


That is a vibratory tumbler, and mine was a rotary.

I actually do have a vibratory tumbler, called Nova 501HT (see
novafinishing.com). It is not as good for rounding rocks,
however. Otherwise it is great.

http://www.novafinishing.com/products.html
http://www.novafinishing.com/prices.html


Ah. Several people sent me links to the HF vibratory tumbler. I did not know
they did the rotary ones too.


Well, if only in name.

But thanks for the links. That Nova 501HT looks a serious
machine. BTW is this where you get your media from? $1.50 +/- per lb
of ceramics is very good. I wonder if they ship to Canada...


I got the media on the cart with the machine at the factory that went
bankrupt. Two half full buckets and a box of ceramic media of various
coarseness, and this vibratory tumbler. I also have some corn cob
media (way too much; anyone wants some cheap?). I was going to polish
a big jar's worth of pennies with the kids this weekend.

i


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On Thu, 27 May 2010 21:02:38 -0500, Ignoramus12281
wrote:

But thanks for the links. That Nova 501HT looks a serious
machine. BTW is this where you get your media from? $1.50 +/- per lb
of ceramics is very good. I wonder if they ship to Canada...


I got the media on the cart with the machine at the factory that went
bankrupt. Two half full buckets and a box of ceramic media of various
coarseness, and this vibratory tumbler. I also have some corn cob
media (way too much; anyone wants some cheap?). I was going to polish
a big jar's worth of pennies with the kids this weekend.



Pennies? Then your corncob media is what you want to use. Ceramic
media will give you either badly beaten up but very shiney pennies..or
copper disks with barely visible features on it.

Frankly..Id use crushed walnut hulls for the job, with a teaspoon of
Brasso tossed into the batch..and checked REGULARLY.

Gunner, who cleans firearms brass in a vibratory cleaner about 2' in
diameter....with walnut hulls


--


"First Law of Leftist Debate
The more you present a leftist with factual evidence
that is counter to his preconceived world view and the
more difficult it becomes for him to refute it without
losing face the chance of him calling you a racist, bigot,
homophobe approaches infinity.

This is despite the thread you are in having not mentioned
race or sexual preference in any way that is relevant to
the subject." Grey Ghost
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JR North wrote:

What exactly broke? BTW, want a real HF POS-get the 5.00 potato
french fry maker. Lasted exactly one potato.
JR
Dweller in the cellar

Why are you bitching?

You got exactly what it said.

POTATO french fry maker

Not POTATOES




jk
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"Ignoramus12281" wrote in message
...
On 2010-05-28, Michael Koblic wrote:

snip
I got the media on the cart with the machine at the factory that went
bankrupt. Two half full buckets and a box of ceramic media of various
coarseness, and this vibratory tumbler. I also have some corn cob
media (way too much; anyone wants some cheap?). I was going to polish
a big jar's worth of pennies with the kids this weekend.

i


I use aquarium gravel to clean my metal detector finds coins that I want to
spend, they look at you funny when you give them brown quarters, dimes, &
nickels!

RogerN


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On 2010-05-28, Gunner Asch wrote:
On Thu, 27 May 2010 21:02:38 -0500, Ignoramus12281
wrote:

But thanks for the links. That Nova 501HT looks a serious
machine. BTW is this where you get your media from? $1.50 +/- per lb
of ceramics is very good. I wonder if they ship to Canada...


I got the media on the cart with the machine at the factory that went
bankrupt. Two half full buckets and a box of ceramic media of various
coarseness, and this vibratory tumbler. I also have some corn cob
media (way too much; anyone wants some cheap?). I was going to polish
a big jar's worth of pennies with the kids this weekend.



Pennies? Then your corncob media is what you want to use. Ceramic
media will give you either badly beaten up but very shiney
pennies..or copper disks with barely visible features on it.


I think that ceramic media would simply grind the pennies to dust.

I have maybe 5 lbs of pennies, it should be fun polishing them.

Frankly..Id use crushed walnut hulls for the job, with a teaspoon of
Brasso tossed into the batch..and checked REGULARLY.


I will see, I think that I will give then an hour with fine corn cob
media.

Gunner, who cleans firearms brass in a vibratory cleaner about 2' in
diameter....with walnut hulls


That's huge! Mine is only 17 inches in diameter.

i
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On 2010-05-28, RogerN wrote:

"Ignoramus12281" wrote in message
...
On 2010-05-28, Michael Koblic wrote:

snip
I got the media on the cart with the machine at the factory that went
bankrupt. Two half full buckets and a box of ceramic media of various
coarseness, and this vibratory tumbler. I also have some corn cob
media (way too much; anyone wants some cheap?). I was going to polish
a big jar's worth of pennies with the kids this weekend.

i


I use aquarium gravel to clean my metal detector finds coins that I want to
spend, they look at you funny when you give them brown quarters, dimes, &
nickels!


Do you get any bad silica dust from it?

i


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"Ignoramus26467" wrote in message
...
On 2010-05-28, RogerN wrote:

"Ignoramus12281" wrote in message
...
On 2010-05-28, Michael Koblic wrote:

snip
I got the media on the cart with the machine at the factory that went
bankrupt. Two half full buckets and a box of ceramic media of various
coarseness, and this vibratory tumbler. I also have some corn cob
media (way too much; anyone wants some cheap?). I was going to polish
a big jar's worth of pennies with the kids this weekend.

i


I use aquarium gravel to clean my metal detector finds coins that I want
to
spend, they look at you funny when you give them brown quarters, dimes, &
nickels!


Do you get any bad silica dust from it?

i


I don't know, there was water in it too. No dust, just bubbles.

RogerN


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"Ignoramus12281" wrote in message
...

[...]

But thanks for the links. That Nova 501HT looks a serious
machine. BTW is this where you get your media from? $1.50 +/- per lb
of ceramics is very good. I wonder if they ship to Canada...


I got the media on the cart with the machine at the factory that went
bankrupt. Two half full buckets and a box of ceramic media of various
coarseness, and this vibratory tumbler. I also have some corn cob
media (way too much; anyone wants some cheap?). I was going to polish
a big jar's worth of pennies with the kids this weekend.


Lucky man.

I got my corncob from the pet store for $6/ 1.8 kg. Enough to fill the bowl
and have a lot left over. I run some brass in it but it has limitations.
Right now I have a batch going in rouge-treated walnut shells. Somebody
mentioned adding Brasso - I wonder how much per batch.

As I said I tried a silica crystals cat litter on some steel parts. The
results were surprisingly good but if run dry, the silica dust is awful and
if wet, clumping occurs (duh, it's cat litter!)

I want the ceramics for steel parts and also plastics for de-burring brass -
I am not sure the nut shells will do that job well.

--
Michael Koblic,
Campbell River, BC


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On Fri, 28 May 2010 09:23:47 -0500, Ignoramus26467
wrote:

On 2010-05-28, Gunner Asch wrote:
On Thu, 27 May 2010 21:02:38 -0500, Ignoramus12281
wrote:

But thanks for the links. That Nova 501HT looks a serious
machine. BTW is this where you get your media from? $1.50 +/- per lb
of ceramics is very good. I wonder if they ship to Canada...

I got the media on the cart with the machine at the factory that went
bankrupt. Two half full buckets and a box of ceramic media of various
coarseness, and this vibratory tumbler. I also have some corn cob
media (way too much; anyone wants some cheap?). I was going to polish
a big jar's worth of pennies with the kids this weekend.



Pennies? Then your corncob media is what you want to use. Ceramic
media will give you either badly beaten up but very shiney
pennies..or copper disks with barely visible features on it.


I think that ceramic media would simply grind the pennies to dust.

I have maybe 5 lbs of pennies, it should be fun polishing them.

Frankly..Id use crushed walnut hulls for the job, with a teaspoon of
Brasso tossed into the batch..and checked REGULARLY.


I will see, I think that I will give then an hour with fine corn cob
media.

Gunner, who cleans firearms brass in a vibratory cleaner about 2' in
diameter....with walnut hulls


That's huge! Mine is only 17 inches in diameter.

i



There is more than one reason Im called Gunner...shrug

Gunner

--


"First Law of Leftist Debate
The more you present a leftist with factual evidence
that is counter to his preconceived world view and the
more difficult it becomes for him to refute it without
losing face the chance of him calling you a racist, bigot,
homophobe approaches infinity.

This is despite the thread you are in having not mentioned
race or sexual preference in any way that is relevant to
the subject." Grey Ghost
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On Fri, 28 May 2010 17:39:45 -0700, "Michael Koblic"
wrote:


"Ignoramus12281" wrote in message
m...

[...]

But thanks for the links. That Nova 501HT looks a serious
machine. BTW is this where you get your media from? $1.50 +/- per lb
of ceramics is very good. I wonder if they ship to Canada...


I got the media on the cart with the machine at the factory that went
bankrupt. Two half full buckets and a box of ceramic media of various
coarseness, and this vibratory tumbler. I also have some corn cob
media (way too much; anyone wants some cheap?). I was going to polish
a big jar's worth of pennies with the kids this weekend.


Lucky man.

I got my corncob from the pet store for $6/ 1.8 kg. Enough to fill the bowl
and have a lot left over. I run some brass in it but it has limitations.
Right now I have a batch going in rouge-treated walnut shells. Somebody
mentioned adding Brasso - I wonder how much per batch.


Try a tablespoon full. It spreads rather well and is simply a media
compound that is carried by your media.

As I said I tried a silica crystals cat litter on some steel parts. The
results were surprisingly good but if run dry, the silica dust is awful and
if wet, clumping occurs (duh, it's cat litter!)

I want the ceramics for steel parts and also plastics for de-burring brass -
I am not sure the nut shells will do that job well.


Yes..they do a pretty fair job, though for steel, it takes a while. Soft
non ferris stuff goes pretty quick

Gunner

--


"First Law of Leftist Debate
The more you present a leftist with factual evidence
that is counter to his preconceived world view and the
more difficult it becomes for him to refute it without
losing face the chance of him calling you a racist, bigot,
homophobe approaches infinity.

This is despite the thread you are in having not mentioned
race or sexual preference in any way that is relevant to
the subject." Grey Ghost
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"Gunner Asch" wrote in message
...

[...]

I got my corncob from the pet store for $6/ 1.8 kg. Enough to fill the
bowl
and have a lot left over. I run some brass in it but it has limitations.
Right now I have a batch going in rouge-treated walnut shells. Somebody
mentioned adding Brasso - I wonder how much per batch.


Try a tablespoon full. It spreads rather well and is simply a media
compound that is carried by your media.


Thanks. What do you do when you finish? Do you re-use the same media?

As I said I tried a silica crystals cat litter on some steel parts. The
results were surprisingly good but if run dry, the silica dust is awful
and
if wet, clumping occurs (duh, it's cat litter!)

I want the ceramics for steel parts and also plastics for de-burring
brass -
I am not sure the nut shells will do that job well.


Yes..they do a pretty fair job, though for steel, it takes a while. Soft
non ferris stuff goes pretty quick


So far I am more impressed with the nut shells than with the corn cob. As
far as I can see the corn cob will polish clean brass but will not remove
stains. The treated nut shells removed most but not all the stains, did a
great job polishing the pieces (up to 3") but did little or no deburring
(minor scratches still apparent after about 8 hours).

The next batch I shall put some steel in the nut shells. What compound do
you use for steel? There is a ton of proprietary compounds out there. I hear
some people just put in a bit of turtle wax. I run the silica with just
water and dish- washing liquid with the predictable result of good cleaning
but flash rusting. I wonder if dumping in a bit of Evaporust would work.

--
Michael Koblic,
Campbell River, BC



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On Sat, 29 May 2010 17:35:18 -0700, "Michael Koblic"
wrote:


"Gunner Asch" wrote in message
.. .

[...]

I got my corncob from the pet store for $6/ 1.8 kg. Enough to fill the
bowl
and have a lot left over. I run some brass in it but it has limitations.
Right now I have a batch going in rouge-treated walnut shells. Somebody
mentioned adding Brasso - I wonder how much per batch.


Try a tablespoon full. It spreads rather well and is simply a media
compound that is carried by your media.


Thanks. What do you do when you finish? Do you re-use the same media?


But of course. Brasso wont hurt anything and it adds a bit of polishing
action to whatever you put in there. More for the softer stuff, less
for the harder stuff.

I tend to reuse walnut hulls for many years. Its not so much the sharp
corners..which after a while..are gone..but its a great carrier for
Brasso, etc. even when rounded off. Brasso is nothing more than a very
fine media in a liquid carrier.

As I said I tried a silica crystals cat litter on some steel parts. The
results were surprisingly good but if run dry, the silica dust is awful
and
if wet, clumping occurs (duh, it's cat litter!)

I want the ceramics for steel parts and also plastics for de-burring
brass -
I am not sure the nut shells will do that job well.


Yes..they do a pretty fair job, though for steel, it takes a while. Soft
non ferris stuff goes pretty quick


So far I am more impressed with the nut shells than with the corn cob. As
far as I can see the corn cob will polish clean brass but will not remove
stains. The treated nut shells removed most but not all the stains, did a
great job polishing the pieces (up to 3") but did little or no deburring
(minor scratches still apparent after about 8 hours).


Ayup. It has little or no ability to remove burrs in anything hard. Add
a bit more Brasso..another table spoon and it will likely remove the
last bit of stains..which generally are etched into the material..just a
heads up. Might not be deep..but walnut hulls have little ability to
actually remove much metal.

The next batch I shall put some steel in the nut shells. What compound do
you use for steel? There is a ton of proprietary compounds out there. I hear
some people just put in a bit of turtle wax. I run the silica with just
water and dish- washing liquid with the predictable result of good cleaning
but flash rusting. I wonder if dumping in a bit of Evaporust would work.


Are you trying to deburr, destain or what? Walnut hulls are really not
much good for anything as hard as steel, other than for putting a nice
almost matt finish on it. Ceramics are what you need for steel.

What are you trying to do with the steel? Let us know and Im sure you
will have a lot of suggestions..some even good.

VBG

Gunner

--


"First Law of Leftist Debate
The more you present a leftist with factual evidence
that is counter to his preconceived world view and the
more difficult it becomes for him to refute it without
losing face the chance of him calling you a racist, bigot,
homophobe approaches infinity.

This is despite the thread you are in having not mentioned
race or sexual preference in any way that is relevant to
the subject." Grey Ghost
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On 2010-05-30, Michael Koblic wrote:

So far I am more impressed with the nut shells than with the corn cob. As
far as I can see the corn cob will polish clean brass but will not remove
stains. The treated nut shells removed most but not all the stains, did a
great job polishing the pieces (up to 3") but did little or no deburring
(minor scratches still apparent after about 8 hours).


Well, after appx. 3-4 hours of polishing, corn cob media did remove
stains from old coins (whole layer of oxidation). It did work very
well, just slowly.

The next batch I shall put some steel in the nut shells. What compound do
you use for steel? There is a ton of proprietary compounds out there. I hear
some people just put in a bit of turtle wax. I run the silica with just
water and dish- washing liquid with the predictable result of good cleaning
but flash rusting. I wonder if dumping in a bit of Evaporust would work.


What kind of Brasso are you guys talking about?

i
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Default Do not buy a Harbor Freight "rock tumbler"

On Sat, 29 May 2010 23:15:43 -0500, Ignoramus6711
wrote:

On 2010-05-30, Michael Koblic wrote:

So far I am more impressed with the nut shells than with the corn cob. As
far as I can see the corn cob will polish clean brass but will not remove
stains. The treated nut shells removed most but not all the stains, did a
great job polishing the pieces (up to 3") but did little or no deburring
(minor scratches still apparent after about 8 hours).


Well, after appx. 3-4 hours of polishing, corn cob media did remove
stains from old coins (whole layer of oxidation). It did work very
well, just slowly.

The next batch I shall put some steel in the nut shells. What compound do
you use for steel? There is a ton of proprietary compounds out there. I hear
some people just put in a bit of turtle wax. I run the silica with just
water and dish- washing liquid with the predictable result of good cleaning
but flash rusting. I wonder if dumping in a bit of Evaporust would work.


What kind of Brasso are you guys talking about?

i

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Brasso



--


"First Law of Leftist Debate
The more you present a leftist with factual evidence
that is counter to his preconceived world view and the
more difficult it becomes for him to refute it without
losing face the chance of him calling you a racist, bigot,
homophobe approaches infinity.

This is despite the thread you are in having not mentioned
race or sexual preference in any way that is relevant to
the subject." Grey Ghost
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Default Do not buy a Harbor Freight "rock tumbler"

On 2010-05-30, Gunner Asch wrote:
On Sat, 29 May 2010 23:15:43 -0500, Ignoramus6711
wrote:

On 2010-05-30, Michael Koblic wrote:

So far I am more impressed with the nut shells than with the corn cob. As
far as I can see the corn cob will polish clean brass but will not remove
stains. The treated nut shells removed most but not all the stains, did a
great job polishing the pieces (up to 3") but did little or no deburring
(minor scratches still apparent after about 8 hours).


Well, after appx. 3-4 hours of polishing, corn cob media did remove
stains from old coins (whole layer of oxidation). It did work very
well, just slowly.

The next batch I shall put some steel in the nut shells. What compound do
you use for steel? There is a ton of proprietary compounds out there. I hear
some people just put in a bit of turtle wax. I run the silica with just
water and dish- washing liquid with the predictable result of good cleaning
but flash rusting. I wonder if dumping in a bit of Evaporust would work.


What kind of Brasso are you guys talking about?

i

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Brasso


OK, more exactly, do you use liquid brasso or some kind of powder? I
have the liquid brasso at home.

i
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On Sat, 29 May 2010 23:38:20 -0500, Ignoramus6711
wrote:

On 2010-05-30, Gunner Asch wrote:
On Sat, 29 May 2010 23:15:43 -0500, Ignoramus6711
wrote:

On 2010-05-30, Michael Koblic wrote:

So far I am more impressed with the nut shells than with the corn cob. As
far as I can see the corn cob will polish clean brass but will not remove
stains. The treated nut shells removed most but not all the stains, did a
great job polishing the pieces (up to 3") but did little or no deburring
(minor scratches still apparent after about 8 hours).

Well, after appx. 3-4 hours of polishing, corn cob media did remove
stains from old coins (whole layer of oxidation). It did work very
well, just slowly.

The next batch I shall put some steel in the nut shells. What compound do
you use for steel? There is a ton of proprietary compounds out there. I hear
some people just put in a bit of turtle wax. I run the silica with just
water and dish- washing liquid with the predictable result of good cleaning
but flash rusting. I wonder if dumping in a bit of Evaporust would work.

What kind of Brasso are you guys talking about?

i

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Brasso


OK, more exactly, do you use liquid brasso or some kind of powder? I
have the liquid brasso at home.

i



The liquid. Simply fill up a tablespoon with the stuff..maybe two..and
dump it into the media if its walnut hulls, corn cobs etc etc.

Works great, less filling!

Gunner

--


"First Law of Leftist Debate
The more you present a leftist with factual evidence
that is counter to his preconceived world view and the
more difficult it becomes for him to refute it without
losing face the chance of him calling you a racist, bigot,
homophobe approaches infinity.

This is despite the thread you are in having not mentioned
race or sexual preference in any way that is relevant to
the subject." Grey Ghost


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On 2010-05-30, Gunner Asch wrote:
What kind of Brasso are you guys talking about?
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Brasso


OK, more exactly, do you use liquid brasso or some kind of powder? I
have the liquid brasso at home.


The liquid. Simply fill up a tablespoon with the stuff..maybe two..and
dump it into the media if its walnut hulls, corn cobs etc etc.


I am running it with Brasso now... thanks for a great tip...

i
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On Sun, 30 May 2010 09:29:59 -0500, Ignoramus28053
wrote:

On 2010-05-30, Gunner Asch wrote:
What kind of Brasso are you guys talking about?
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Brasso

OK, more exactly, do you use liquid brasso or some kind of powder? I
have the liquid brasso at home.


The liquid. Simply fill up a tablespoon with the stuff..maybe two..and
dump it into the media if its walnut hulls, corn cobs etc etc.


I am running it with Brasso now... thanks for a great tip...

i


Give it a couple hours at the least. Its a very fine abrasive, but it
works pretty damned well.

Gunner

--


"First Law of Leftist Debate
The more you present a leftist with factual evidence
that is counter to his preconceived world view and the
more difficult it becomes for him to refute it without
losing face the chance of him calling you a racist, bigot,
homophobe approaches infinity.

This is despite the thread you are in having not mentioned
race or sexual preference in any way that is relevant to
the subject." Grey Ghost
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On Sun, 30 May 2010 11:19:11 -0700, Gunner Asch
wrote:

On Sun, 30 May 2010 09:29:59 -0500, Ignoramus28053
wrote:

On 2010-05-30, Gunner Asch wrote:
What kind of Brasso are you guys talking about?
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Brasso

OK, more exactly, do you use liquid brasso or some kind of powder? I
have the liquid brasso at home.

The liquid. Simply fill up a tablespoon with the stuff..maybe two..and
dump it into the media if its walnut hulls, corn cobs etc etc.


I am running it with Brasso now... thanks for a great tip...

i


Give it a couple hours at the least. Its a very fine abrasive, but it
works pretty damned well.

Gunner


Brasso also has ammonia in it, which is the active ingredient in a lot
of copper fouling bore cleaners. However, it's only at 2-3% You can
google the msds. I've used exactly the same thing, Brasso on walnut
hulls, for a long time for brass for reloading. I now have some stuff
from Dillon.

Pete Keillor

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On Sun, 30 May 2010 13:31:38 -0500, Pete Keillor
wrote:

On Sun, 30 May 2010 11:19:11 -0700, Gunner Asch
wrote:

On Sun, 30 May 2010 09:29:59 -0500, Ignoramus28053
wrote:

On 2010-05-30, Gunner Asch wrote:
What kind of Brasso are you guys talking about?
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Brasso

OK, more exactly, do you use liquid brasso or some kind of powder? I
have the liquid brasso at home.

The liquid. Simply fill up a tablespoon with the stuff..maybe two..and
dump it into the media if its walnut hulls, corn cobs etc etc.


I am running it with Brasso now... thanks for a great tip...

i


Give it a couple hours at the least. Its a very fine abrasive, but it
works pretty damned well.

Gunner


Brasso also has ammonia in it, which is the active ingredient in a lot
of copper fouling bore cleaners. However, it's only at 2-3% You can
google the msds. I've used exactly the same thing, Brasso on walnut
hulls, for a long time for brass for reloading. I now have some stuff
from Dillon.

Pete Keillor



What did you get and how does it work?

Gunner

--


"First Law of Leftist Debate
The more you present a leftist with factual evidence
that is counter to his preconceived world view and the
more difficult it becomes for him to refute it without
losing face the chance of him calling you a racist, bigot,
homophobe approaches infinity.

This is despite the thread you are in having not mentioned
race or sexual preference in any way that is relevant to
the subject." Grey Ghost
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On Sun, 30 May 2010 13:06:09 -0700, Gunner Asch
wrote:

On Sun, 30 May 2010 13:31:38 -0500, Pete Keillor
wrote:

On Sun, 30 May 2010 11:19:11 -0700, Gunner Asch
wrote:

On Sun, 30 May 2010 09:29:59 -0500, Ignoramus28053
wrote:

On 2010-05-30, Gunner Asch wrote:
What kind of Brasso are you guys talking about?
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Brasso

OK, more exactly, do you use liquid brasso or some kind of powder? I
have the liquid brasso at home.

The liquid. Simply fill up a tablespoon with the stuff..maybe two..and
dump it into the media if its walnut hulls, corn cobs etc etc.


I am running it with Brasso now... thanks for a great tip...

i

Give it a couple hours at the least. Its a very fine abrasive, but it
works pretty damned well.

Gunner


Brasso also has ammonia in it, which is the active ingredient in a lot
of copper fouling bore cleaners. However, it's only at 2-3% You can
google the msds. I've used exactly the same thing, Brasso on walnut
hulls, for a long time for brass for reloading. I now have some stuff
from Dillon.

Pete Keillor



What did you get and how does it work?

Gunner


Just their Rapid Polish 290, still in my 30 yr. old Thumler's Tumbler.
It works at least as good as Brasso, doesn't have the ammonia. They
claim it doesn't weaken the brass like Brasso, but I had very few case
failures loading .357 brass over and over for years using Brasso. I
lost my 50 lb. bag of walnut hulls in a move, so I'm using some Lyman
media right now.

Pete
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