Results 1 to 5 of 5
Thread: Italian slate hones?
-
11-24-2006, 11:39 PM #1
Italian slate hones?
Anyone familiar w/ Italian slate hones?
Look here: http://cgi.ebay.com/Natural-Slate-Sh...QQcmdZViewItem
-
11-25-2006, 01:16 AM #2
- Join Date
- May 2005
- Location
- St. Louis, Missouri, United States
- Posts
- 8,454
- Blog Entries
- 2
Thanked: 4942The person selling them said that the grit is approximately 2500. That would seem pretty course for a finishing or polishing stone.
Lynn
-
11-25-2006, 02:24 AM #3
Well, slate is metmorphosed shale which is basically very fine clay particales. I just don't see it as a honing medium. The garnets in the coticule are much harder than the particles in the slate. Unless the clay was a very special type not the typical stuff. It would have to have a very high aluminum content almost like levigated alumina.
No matter how many men you kill you can't kill your successor-Emperor Nero
-
11-25-2006, 04:36 AM #4
- Join Date
- May 2005
- Location
- Saint Paul, Minnesota, United States
- Posts
- 8,023
- Blog Entries
- 1
Thanked: 2209I have been in contact with the seller for some time. I have one of his hones. It is Italian slate that is cut from Italian pool table slate. I have not posted anything because I have not finished testing it yet.
I did hone an Ebay razor on it. It is definitely finer than a 1000 or a 4000 grit. It also works as a substrate... that is I sprinkled some rottenstone on it and started honing. It did have a positive result but i did not have it in a honing cycle. It is also very slow.
But....the jury is out as to just how fine it is and how fast it is. I also don't know if it would be good as a substrate for a powdered abrasive.
I also scrounged up a piece of chinese pool table slate and had it cut for me into a hone. That one I have not used yet but it does not appear as promising from a visual perspective.
There are three major sources of pool table slate. Italian, Brazil, and China. You can get the broken pieces from a pool table company for free. But the cost of having it cut to size is expensive.
Wait a little while longer please,Randolph Tuttle, a SRP Mentor for residents of Minnesota & western Wisconsin
-
11-27-2006, 12:21 AM #5
Slate hones
Kees,
I have a couple of slate hones in my collection of hones from around the world. They are somewhat coarse and were, I believe, a local solution that never made it to a wider audience. Slate is a metamorphic stone meaning that it was heated and compressed from the sedimentary stone, shale, which is like hardened mud.
Howard