:
Polished
: To smooth or brighten a surface increasing the reflective
quality and luster by chemical or physical processes. Generally
gloss levels should be + 90 as measured by a gloss meter. To
achieve this, final polishing should have been done by latest
Italian/ French machines using imported abrasives.
Buffing
: Using a non-abrasive pad attached to a machine, which
rotates the pad in a circular fashion over the stone, generally
between 150-300 RPM. Polishing formulations containing micro-fine
abrasive materials are used with buffing to produce a more reflective
gloss on the surface of stone. Waxes are also used with buffing
to enhance the gloss of polished stone.
Honed
: To grind a surface with a high grit material to a
uniform specification without producing a reflective surface.
Sawn
: i.e. unpolished. It is not advisable to buy this
way because : floor polishers do not give as good a polish as
factory machine polishers. many defects are not visible easily
before polishing.
Calibration
: To grind a surface with a high grit material to a
uniform surface to maintain the thickness variation.
Gangsaw
: To grind two sides of the stone surfaces with a high
grit material to a uniform specification without producing a
reflective surface.
Shade
variation : Slabs / tiles should be sorted to ensure
uniformity of shade. Normally, any colour can be sorted into
three shades. Sorting is simple -just lay all the material on
the floor and look from different directions.
Colour
patches : These are darker or lighter patches or bands
of single colours due to mineral localisation.
Scratches
: The marring of the surface caused by physical trauma
such as small stones or sand embedded in shoes scraping across
a marble floor.
Staining
: The absorption of foreign pigments or oils into the
porous stone causing discoloration.
Double
color : Sometimes two different grain sizes occur in
the same slab, giving the appearance of a double colour.
Free
lengths : i.e. lengths varying randomly while width
is constant are also very attractive. Choose the widths as per
the expected floor area. Buy random lengths and cut at your
site to fit.
Flatness
Tolerances
A 4’ dimension in any direction on the surface shall determine
variation from true plane, or flat surfaces. Such variations
on polish, hone, and fine rubbed surfaces shall not exceed tolerances
listed below or 1/3 of the specified joint width, whichever
is greater. On surfaces having other finishes, the maximum variation
from true plane shall not exceed the tolerance listed below
or + 3 mm of the specified joint width, whichever is greater.
Polished,
honed or fine rubbed finishes... + 0.5 mm
Sawn, Calibrated, 4-cut and 6-cut.... + 1 mm
Edges also
can be chamfered / bevelled. Chamfering removes whiteness and
chipped edges. This looks very good. Chamfering is a simple
process in which a polishing brick is run at an angle of 45
?.
Quality
Details :
Polished
Granite
a. One Side Fine Mirror Polished.
b. Gangsawn/Cutter side
c. Thickness variation is + 0.5 mm to 1 mm depending upon Tile/Slab.
FINISHES
The stone
is available in a range of eight smooth and textured finishes:
- WATERJETt:
a non-slip matt finish, produced by working the surface of
the stone with high-pressure water jets.
- HONED
a smooth finish with a slight sheen, produced by using a polishing
head.
- Sanded:
sawn stone slabs are coarsely polished: this removes saw marks
and leaves a semi-smooth, regular finish.
- CLEFTt:
with this traditional treatment the stone is riven along its
line of cleavage to reveal the natural grain; this gives an
undulating surface with great character.
- GRITBLASTED:
a high-pressure airline projects coarse-grained grit onto
the top surface of the stone producing a finish similar to
cleft, but available on slabs of greater size.
- FLAMED:
the top surface of the slab is burnt off, giving an irregular
textured
finishtextured: the top surfaces of sawn slabs are pneumatically
tooled to produce a pitted or grooved surface.
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