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RE: ATM alternative grinding materials



Dennis:
    A few years ago we hosted a student from Tashkent for 1-year of secondary school study here in the US.  A few days ago he telephoned us that he is again in the US, visiting. Presuming that I can contact him again while he is here, that I can get some polishing materials to him, and that he would not have difficulty getting it through airport security and customs, he may be able to hand-carry some cerium oxide to you.
 
Richard Klappal
 
-----Original Message-----
From: owner-atm@shore.net [mailto:owner-atm@shore.net]On Behalf Of Dennis Nikitin
Sent: Tuesday, December 25, 2001 11:58
To: atm@shore.net
Subject: ATM alternative grinding materials

Hi All,
This is the first time I'm posting message to the list. And first of all I would like to greet all of you. It's really so great when people share their hardly won experience following the real ATM spirit.
 
In 1991 I was to pause my ATM practice due to specific economic and social conditions (poverty and total disorder) in my country and collapse of Soviet Union.  I'm russian and I live in Tashkent/ Uzbekistan but still I call this country Russia mostly because of my mind's inertia. Nowadays things are going beter, so good that I decided to go on with telescope making. The first surprise is that there are no abrasive vendors left on the local market. Briefly speaking I can not find even a simplest emery.
 
I have experimented with the ordinary sand and found out that this kind of material is absolutely insufficiend for glass grinding. It breaks down after a couple of strokes and seems to do very poor work on a glass. My next  idea is to use silica. As I remember from the university mineralogy course - silica is 1.4 times softer than emery, and 2 times softer than aluminium oxide. The difference is not too big. I found out that the grit used in metalurgy for sand blasting and moulding is almost pure silica. Now I'm almost sure that it will work but before I try I'd  be happy if anyone will confirm or deny this idea.
 
The same story with polishing materials. I can not find either cerium oxide or the red powder (sorry I dont know what is it in English).  The idea is to use  green chromium dioxide(Cr2O3). This stuff is used for polishing metals. I don't have a fine grinded glass to try it but I polished a 100 years old copper kettle - the result is very impressive. All comments are wellcomed.
 
By the way sorry if I'm rising theme which is chewed and swallowed many times ago, but I haven't found anything on the subject in russian ATM literature.
 
Best wishes, Merry Christmas to all.
 
Dennis Nikitin,
Tashkent/Uzbekistan.