Tony, and all. I would love feedback on
this next one. Tell me your experience, that you don’t agree, that you
agree, that you have seen differently but tell me something, because Tony’s
questions worries me quite a bit.
This industry has taken quite a turn in
the last decade. More and more subgranites and submarbles as I call them, are
being filled with a glue or resin. Sub because when extracted from the
ground they can have many opened veins and little holes .One way they fill a the
manufactures, they go through heat, lamps or lets call it an oven, stone gets
hot, and a filler is applied. The stone is perfectly polished and you have all
the holes and fissures filled to a perfect shine and very even fill (no dips).
My discovery. Here I get a 5000sqft
home to repolish, various areas. Complete lippage removal in most areas, except
the master washroom that is quite beautiful so I only powder polish it. I spent
3 weeks grinding and polishing every room to near perfection, one of my best
jobs. The master washroom I spent 30min to an hour for a fast polish. Doesn’t
it look worst than when I started. The customer is so upset he wants me
to rip the marble out and redo his washroom.
It was settled by discussion, but the
drama got me to explore the situation a little further.
I found a virgin tile, and it looked
perfect, the back of the tile was covered with some solidification material,
some resin and marble dust. Sometimes they also put a fiberglass type
mesh.
I grinded it off to see the stone bare and
what I found was a marble that had a fissure issue to the same consistency as a
Travertine. The reason my polish looked bad is as many of you know,
polyester fills never really shine like a natural stone. So the look was sort
of high shine, mid shine in a tiger pattern.
In the same month I hit 3 more jobs of this
nature all with different stones.
We are headed towards a very different
future in polishing. If anyone is working on filling techniques and wants
to share notes contact me.
To answer your question Tony, you can buy from
Tenax or other glue manufactures a liquid filler resin. It’s the same consistency
as a new bottle of honey. You hone the granite down to a metal bond, allow for
all the humidity to exit. You apply it to your whole surface, and allow
it to dry then hone and polish it. You usually have to repeat it twice. Hard as
heck to do because conditions have to be very controlled or else the glue doesn’t
dry, or dries too fast to the point smoke is visible.
That doesn’t work you can always do
what we use to do when 100$ for glue was too expensive. Crazy glue and a razor
blade and patience. Make sure you label the crazy glue bottle with a more
suitable name, Stone glue or Fissure Filler.
Anthony
Masecchia
Master Stone
Consultant
Marble
Maestro tm
6615 Papineau
H2G 2X3
514-777-7797
514-904-1815
From: Tony StoneBrite
[mailto:
Sent: January 15, 2009 4:45 PM
To:
Subject: [sccpartners] Granite
Repair
This is an odd and very pricey
granite/quartzite. It has some of the fill coming out.Tiny spots
everywhere.The pictures are the way the granite should look. What would be the easiest wat to fill
the spots after cleaning the holes out? It is a polished
material Thank You in advance Tony
StoneBrite Have A Great Day Tony DiBartolo |
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