Jason,
I would never try to grind or hone over a ceramic tile, you are
asking for problems. Try the following
1.
Purchase some clear packing tape, tape over the inserts, over
tape the insert, then go back with a single edge razor blade and cut off the
tape even with the grout line, you should be able to hone over the ceramic
tiles. The tape is so thin the diamond will glide over the tape. Seeing it a
soft travertine I would suggest starting with a 220 grit and test a small area,
if ir removes the damage continue , if it does not go to the 120 but in most
cases you can remove a loot of damage with a 220 diamond, providing it’s
a good 220 grit, meaning all 220 grit diamonds are not created equal.
Note : if the damage is very light try a sample at a 400, I recommend
always test a small area if your not sure of the damage in the stone. To do a
test take little time but on 1200 plus sq.ft if you can eliminate 1 hone you
have saved a lot of time.
There are products out in the market call traver-fill specifically
designed for filling travertine. I think StoneCare Central has one , if
not I can put StoneCare Central in touch with the direct manufacturer. This a
great product, very little shrinkage and once you know how to use it it’s
great. It matches the quarry fills almost perfect.
2.
Dry grinding marble, I have seem this done before, the problem
you have is the dust, even with vac attached to your floor machines there is
still dust that get on the customer furnishings, and you will have a n
unhappy customer.
For as much as diamonds I prefer
the triple thick 3” diamonds from StoneCare Central I have used these
diamond for over 8 maybe 10 years as my diamond of choice, I operated a
restoration company that had sales over 1 million dollars per year and that ‘s
the diamond I used.
3.
Dry grinding to see the scratch patterns is nice, but I use a
teach in The Stone and Tile School how to make sure you achieve a good even and
complete grind or honing through a timing process that will guarantee a good
hone and will assist you in bidding the time it will take to complete a project
regardless of the size.
4.
I concrete diamond for marble, there a lot of suppliers
trying to design a diamond that will work on ALL materials, I still believe
that you need to use the diamond that is designed for the stone you are working
on. Marble, Granite, concrete. Some day maybe there will be one diamond for all
but for now I’m not convinced of it.
Don’t forget after you complete this job to sell the
customer theproper care products for cleaning the floor and for the proper
cleaning of any other stone or tile surface that maybe in the house
CARE PRODUCTS MEAN EXTRA SALES AND PROFITS FOR YOU
If I can be of any other assistance please advise, visit or
school site at www.thestoneandtileschool.com
John E. Freitag
President/Director
The Stone and Tile School
Office 407-567-7652
Cell 407-615-0134
jfreitag@thestoneandtileschool.com
From:
jfrancis@protocolfloorcare.com [mailto:jfrancis@protocolfloorcare.com]
Sent: Saturday, May 09, 2009 12:17 PM
To: Restoration and Maintenance
Subject: [sccpartners] Travertine Grind
Sent from my Verizon Wireless BlackBerry
From: jason francis
Date: Sat, 9 May 2009 08:25:59 -0700 (PDT)
To: <jfrancis@protocolfloorcare.com>
Subject: Travertine Grind
Since we are talking about travertine
I thought I would get some feedback on my next big project. I am grinding 1250
sq. ft of soft honed travertine and bringing it to a high polish. The homeowner
decided to put ceramic tile inserts throughout the floor, of all things to put.
1. Has anyone ground ceramic inserts? My assumption is that if it is through
body, than it will be fine. My plan is to try an area and see how it works
first. Hopefully it is thick enough tile. Man it would be a lot more work if I
have to blend around these inserts with metals then duct tape them off. 2. Do
ya'll have a preferred fill? I am planning on using epoxy grout. Is there
anything wrong with Laticrete from Home Cheapo? Obviously I want the fill the
take a high polish. 3. This question is strange. I have a full set of diamonds
I use for concrete called T Bone(Dry). Manufacturer sells them as also for
marble and travertine used dry. They say its new technology. Has anyone ever
worked resins dry on marble? I am almost afraid to try. I would assume there is
no harm in just using them wet. At the same time it would be nice to see the
scratch pattern as you work. Thanks in advance for your thoughts, Jason
Protocol
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