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How Do I Polish Quartz & Beryl?

Aquamarine

The most important thing about polishing Quartz and Beryl is to have a very good pre-polish on the stone before you attempt to polish.

Rough cut your stone like you normally would. I use a well worn Crystalite steel 260 grit lap, unless the stone is large. If it is a large stone I often rough it in with a Crystalite steel 100x grit lap then cut with the worn 260.

Next I use a worn 600 lap for meeting the tier/facets, this lap will still cut, but not fast, making it easy to control and leaving a nice scratch free finish. It is important to have all the facets at meet point and well cut before going to the 1200 Nu Bond, because it is basically a pre-polish lap and will not cut much.

 

1200 Nu Bond Lap I have tried several combinations, but I think that the RayTech composite 1200 (Nu Bond) lap, especially after it is broken in a little, is ideal for a quality pre-polish on Beryl, and Quartz.

A Crystalite 3,000 can work well also and is a little flatter, but I prefer the finish of the RayTech. I do not recommned the Crystalite 3,000 lap. I have had just too many poorly plated 3,000 laps and feel if you want a 3,000 lap a charged lap would be better.

The RayTech Nu bond 1200 will hardly cut at all (when it is broken in) and is not the flattest lap I have ever used, but it leaves a great finish that with just a touch on the polish lap will make a high polish.

I really do not use the Nu Bond 1200 for anything else but Quartz, and Beryl. The 1200 Nu Bond is too fine for Tourmaline and Garnet. It will leave an orange peel finish that is hard to polish through on these material.

For polish I prefer the Spectra Ultra Laps, they are a mylar film that is coated with a high grade polish, on the dull side. Some people claim that Ultralaps round the facets, but I have found that with a little practice and a light touch they work as well as anything I have ever found and are fairly cheap to use.

Recharging Ultralaps with a Cerium Oxide (CO2) slurry extends them quite a bit. What is a Spectra (Ultralap) Lap? How do I use them?

I use my Nu bond 1200 lap for a base (it is the last cutting lap on the stone so there is not cheating needed) with a little bit of water on it to make a seal between the Spectra Ultralap and it, and with a moderate lap speed, it only takes a second to polish a facet.

Other polishing laps for Quartz are a plastic lap with cerium oxide, a tin lap scored with cerium (works well, but needs to be a dedicated lap and is more money) and a phenolic lap with CO2.

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Home Rough Bargains Equipment Books Online Designs Just Ask Jeff Order News List Contact Me Links
Amethyst Aquamarine Beryl Citrine Emerald Garnet Opal Peridot Sapphire Scapolite Spinel Sunstone Topaz Tourmaline Quartz Zircon
Beginner's Page New Stuff Odds & Ends Specials Parcels Synthetics
Cut Gemstones Gemological Information Gemstone Pricing Guides How to buy Gemstones


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