Yes! They will have to get a design variance and go all polished or honed. Wondering how it would go if I went 220 or 400 to 1800 then MB20.

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From: "John Freitag" <jfreitag@thestoneandtileschool.com>
Date: Thu, 26 May 2011 08:42:12 -0400
To: Restoration and Maintenance<sccpartners@stoneandtilepros.com>
ReplyTo: "Restoration and Maintenance" <sccpartners@stoneandtilepros.com>
Subject: RE: [sccpartners] basalt

Mike

 

Unfortunately, there are not to many ways to handle this floor. If you don’t tape off each section of  floor where the finishes are then there is really no way to control overlapping onto the adjoining surface. the only other way to attack this floor would be to hand hone and polish each section. The other option is to leave the entire floor at a honed surface or the entire floor at a polished surface.  It becomes the lesser of the two evils.

No matter what you do, the taping off or the hand  machine route then Charge for it time is money. Don’t you just love designers that come up with these mixes. 

 

 

John E. Freitag

President/Director

The Stone and Tile School

Office 407-567-7652

Cell 407-615-0134

jfreitag@thestoneandtileschool.com

 

schoollogo

 

www.thestoneandtileschool.com

 

 

 

From: Mike Marsoun [mailto:nulifesc@bigpond.com]
Sent: Wednesday, May 25, 2011 8:06 PM
To: Restoration and Maintenance
Subject: [sccpartners] basalt

 

Hi Guys. Have this job to bid where there is a lot of polished basalt next to honed. It has a LOT of wear and in some areas you can barely tell the two finishes apart.  They want it all restored. Other than the obvious considerations, any ideas? I will not be taping tiles off, there is about 3500 sf.

 


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