That’s manageable
Not a bad job
Bet you make it look great

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On Feb 26, 2018, at 5:36 PM, Mike Alston <realmikealston@gmail.com> wrote:

The countertop is around 20 square feet. 

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On Feb 26, 2018, at 4:57 PM, Stuart Rosen <mail@stoneshine.com> wrote:

Consider using a urethane product like Bonstone dymond around those wet area’s

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On Feb 26, 2018, at 4:35 PM, Mike Alston <realmikealston@gmail.com> wrote:

Yes there are, a few holes and chips around the the sink mostly. 

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On Feb 26, 2018, at 4:09 PM, Stuart Rosen <mail@stoneshine.com> wrote:

Mike-That isn't Granite but Rain forest brown.
Geologically its a serpentinite and you can treat it like green marble or Granite.
We use good quality diamonds taking it up to 3500 grit-Then use MB-20 or crystallizer to finish it.
It will come out great-Is there any damage to the surface-? One of the pic looks like it-

On Mon, Feb 26, 2018 at 3:50 PM, Michael Alston <realmikealston@gmail.com> wrote:
Okay thank you all. 

On Mon, Feb 26, 2018 at 3:33 PM, Bob Murrell <bmurrell@m3techinc.com> wrote:

Just some thoughts:

It is usually tight grained black granites (absolute and similar) that are harder to match. In some cases, resined granites can be difficult to match as well. Using the correct diamonds to as high of a grit as possible and polishing correctly with a good granite powder (in this case a dark granite powder) in combination with a crystallizer and steel wool usually works well. Some granites respond better to pure tin oxide too. If in fact the granite is resined, you may have to re-resin with an appropriate darkening product. There are several available that will do the trick.

 

Bob Murrell

Director of Operations

SCC/M3 Technologies Inc.

Cell-865-607-0957

Office-800-342-4533

bmurrell@m3techinc.com

www.m3techinc.com

Skype-robert.murrell8

 

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From: sccpartners@stoneandtilepros.simplelists.com [mailto:sccpartners@stoneandtilepros.simplelists.com] On Behalf Of Mike Alston
Sent: Monday, February 26, 2018 3:02 PM
To: sccpartners@stoneandtilepros.simplelists.com
Subject: Granite countertops

 

How well can I expect this dark color granite to polish up. I don't want to give unrealistic expectations.

 
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