Orange peel is usually the result of over polishing. To remove it rehone with a 400 and repolish. You may find it helpful to not go so high on your hones as well. Most marble should be able to be polished at 400-800. Use a little powder and work slowly checking your work as you go.

Virus-free. www.avast.com

On Wed, Jan 24, 2018 at 2:05 PM, Stuart Young <santafefc@sbcglobal.net> wrote:
We did a job removing etching from a white marble countertop.  My results seem to vary from job to job on surfaces like this - sometimes I will get a beautiful glass-like polish and other times it will appear like a fine “orange peel” effect when you do a close inspection, and usually the reflection off the veining seems to be more apparent.  Granted, I've never had a client be unhappy with the results, but I feel I should be able to more consistently get a more crisp reflection with a factory finish.  Typically I will work on individual etch spots (if they are deep) with sandpaper or flex-diamond pads, hone things up to 800-1500, and polish with either 5x or MB12.  In this case, I pretty much had to hone the entire surface because the whole surface was pretty beat up.  

Any suggestions?


Before:

After:

 
Visit list archives, subscribe, unsubscribe or change your subscription 
preferences:
http://stoneandtilepros.simplelists.com/sccpartners
 
Start a new conversation (thread): 
sccpartners@stoneandtilepros.simplelists.com




--
Frederick M. Hueston
www.stoneforensics.com
office             321 514 6845      
Stone Inspection and Troubleshooting seminar Jan 29-Feb 1, 2018 Las Vegas
For more details see the training section at www.stoneforensics.com
check out the Stone and Tile Radio Show at http://www.blogtalkradio.com/drfred