I have a Lavina planetary that gets up to 1400 rpm. I have some 1500 grit diamond impregnated pads from SCC. Think this would work? Ill try it on Monday.
Sorry JasonHope I didn't screw you up to bad-I neglected to mention(as John Stated) to be careful crystallizing on the whites. We always test first(in anything we do) what the results will be.If you do begin to blacken the floor a little 5x will fix it right up.We also run our 3000 pad dry on the klindex machine but in the future I will use Fred's idea of the burnisher. We do a large building where the white epoxy terrazzo and the crystallizer get along. I have done other floors where they havent but it hasnt been white floors only. Sometimes crystallizer just doesnt work well-maybe it is due to moisture or other factors. It never really mattered as we allways find a way to get the job completed and move onto the next job.
On Fri, Jun 1, 2012 at 3:14 PM, john jackson <kcstoneguy@yahoo.com> wrote:i just polished an epoxy terrazzo countertop today with incredible results. i went to 400 with the diamonds, wet. then 800 and 1500 dry with the vortex pads (like monkey and twister pads) at very high rpm with a hand polisher..looked incredible..this had glass and mirror chips with black matrix..the high speed really brought the color out..
From: Jason Francis <jfrancis@marbleglow.com>
To: Restoration and Maintenance <sccpartners@stoneandtilepros.com>
Sent: Friday, June 1, 2012 2:50 PM
Subject: RE: [sccpartners] Epoxy Terrazzo
Fred,That's worth a try. A 1500 grit monkey? I brought resins to 800. Will it shine marble and epoxy evenly? As is the epoxy has much more reflection than the marble.Crystallizer tends to darken the white floor, and sort of makes it look dirty, mostly because the stones pop.Powder polish looked incredible, and gave the floor an even shine. It is just alot of work.Thanks!Jason
Sent from my iPhoneJasonI have a trick for expoxy terrazzo that will pop and unbelieve shine without the use of powders or crystallizer. If you can get hold a high speed burnisher simple use a monkey pad or any of those type pads and the shine will pop. You can rent a burnisher if you dont have one
On Fri, Jun 1, 2012 at 2:36 AM, John Freitag <jfreitag@thestoneandtileschool.com> wrote:
Jason,We have light colored epoxy and cement based terrazzo in our training center and we can get a great shine and finish after 400 diamonds and if we want some additional shine then lightly and I mean lightly crystallize the floor.The biggest mistake on terrazzo is that everyone want to start honing terrazzo and a 120 or 220. If the terrazzo has never been at a natural polish the stone needs to be started at a least a 50 grit the then honed up. Over years of stripping and waxing floors on cement based terrazzo floor the cement will break become lower than the marble chips and you need to get the marble chips and the cement honed down to the same level. If you don’t achieve a good cut on the first grind you can hone as high as you want and you will never get the great finish you want .On epoxy terrazzo normally the installer left the floor at a 80 to 120 grit and to achieve the great shine and clarity on the terrazzo you need to make first cut the most important cut to achieve the great shine and clarity. If the first cut does not remove all the scratches left from the installer you will never achieve the finish you are looking for.John E FreitagDirectorThe Stone & Tile SchoolOffice 407-567-7652Cell 407-615-0134<image001.jpg>From: Jason Francis [mailto:jfrancis@marbleglow.com]
Sent: Thursday, May 31, 2012 6:57 PM
To: Restoration and Maintenance
Subject: [sccpartners] Epoxy TerrazzoThere has been good discussion on terrazzo lately, and I thought I would keep it going........Still on epoxy terrazzo job as mentioned before, 3k SF(white with white mix). Because its epoxy, does it really need an impregnator? Obviously, it would be for the marble. Is this time well spent?I have run the diamonds up to 800 and plan on light crystallizing as the epoxy is much more reflective than the marble. I wasnt gonna powder polish, because I have all these grills and metal to work around, and it it looks good without it. However, Stu, would MB-22 be a good choice if I were to do a powder polish? If it pops the stones that much better than the crytallizer I could do both.Thanks guys.Jason--
Marble Glow
Jason Francis
Sales / Lead Stone Pro
www.marbleglow.com
333 Norton Road
Red Hook, NY 12571
845-208-8289 office
845-704-1654 fax
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Recommended stone care products http://www.stonecarecentral.com/?Click=2149Many of my articles can be found at www.stoneandtilepros.comListen to my radio show www.blogtalkradio.com/drfredoffice 321 514 6845See my specialty products at www.godrfred.com--
Marble Glow
Jason Francis
Sales / Lead Stone Pro
www.marbleglow.com
333 Norton Road
Red Hook, NY 12571
845-208-8289 office
845-704-1654 fax