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Thread: I Found It Over There
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02-24-2014, 01:21 AM #1
Nice, I need to go scavenging the roadside I guess
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02-24-2014, 01:26 AM #2
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02-24-2014, 02:15 AM #3
In general lapidary blades really have no teeth at all. More like grooves filled with diamond and the saw has a gravity feed mechanism. back in the geology lab we used a Diesel and oil mixture for cooling and lube. The blade would very slowly chip away at the rock.
No matter how many men you kill you can't kill your successor-Emperor Nero
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02-24-2014, 02:31 AM #4
- Join Date
- Feb 2013
- Location
- Haida Gwaii, British Columbia, Canada
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- 14,455
Thanked: 4830I've seen a few of those. They all run an oil cooling/lubricating fluid. Not sure about that if you want to use them with water later. You would have to clean the oil off. I have a friend that has a couple 16" ones, so I could get hime to do cutting if I wanted to go down that road
It's not what you know, it's who you take fishing!
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02-24-2014, 03:18 AM #5
Well, those two are out. NEXT!
Might work for intermediate, but did not help edge off 8k tonight. So I went to Africa! Two fresh ZG jobs on the sink prepared for a showdown tonight.
These rocks were from 10 miles away. I think my stepping stone was better. I'll start numbering them, because good gravy it would certainly suck to get mixed up and work up a bunch of the wrong rock. Or to forget where the good one came from. Note to self: Limit reconnaissance runs to one or two places per trip, and make notes.
See, this is from one end of the cut over there too. There's a whole different layer a little further down.
One problem is that all of these locations are on the grade (of 8-16%). Parking and walking gets long in some places. Hey...now i'll have another reason to stop the bike and get off on the hills (usually for oxygen- huff puff), now to "look at some rocks". Will suck going down, no forget that, I don't stop going down the hill.Last edited by WadePatton; 02-24-2014 at 03:22 AM.
Buttery Goodness is the Grail
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02-24-2014, 03:30 AM #6
- Join Date
- Feb 2013
- Location
- Haida Gwaii, British Columbia, Canada
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- 14,455
Thanked: 4830I hear you on that. The guy that rock hounds with is kind of funny, in the humorous way. The last time we were out I had climb up a short slope and them a little ways up a rock face and was prying out a rock for near the base of a large over hanging rock, he said "Is everything ok at home". We came up with a new system on marking where rocks come from. It is a little complicated to explain the details of. Basically it is a distance reference combined with a geography reference that get marked on the rocks with chalk initially and then paint pen when they are dry and in theory that will also be on each hone in paint pen.
It's not what you know, it's who you take fishing!
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02-24-2014, 01:34 AM #7
I believe the flaking helps...get us small enough rocks to tote. But yeah I like to have at least an inch of non-flaky in the middle. I check the broken side for an idea, then "trim" things up with an axe (poll side), and scurry back to the truck.
I have a lot more cuts to check out--for better or worser specimens.Buttery Goodness is the Grail