stinger haut
Posts: 518
Joined: 6/7/2006 Status: offline
|
Thank you for the compilment about the bottle. This bottle required a lot of hand work before it went into the tumbler to remove any scratches, pitting, casewear, etc. Then the inside was cut with 600 cutting oxide for about 24 hours. After the inside was done, 1,000 cutting oxide was run for about 30 hours both on the inside and out. A polish was used on the inside, while the outside received 1,200 slow cutter for about 4 days. Then I had some 1,200 left over from another bottle that I tumbled, the 1,200 had turned into polish by that time, so it was used to polish the outside, while the regular polish was used on the inside. This took about 2 more days and the bottle was finished. RPM's were about 30 throughout the entire tumbling process and I used a 4" canister. The stopples were Jar Doctors using a 3 prong for the base and both a cone and open stopples for the mouth. Some of the embossing had a little damage, that still exists. Luckily, it is very minor. I completely forgot to protect the iron on the pontil, so its just about all gone. I keep a log on all my tumbling with dates, RPM's, cutting & polishing types and how long each process takes. This helps me with future tumbling. Stinger
|