Members mud Posted March 1, 2015 Author Members Report Posted March 1, 2015 Hmmm.... let's see if this adds a pic. Black slab I like it. Do you get any reverberation from it? Quote
Members taintedelephant Posted March 1, 2015 Members Report Posted March 1, 2015 I would also like to know how the particle board tile does, I used jb weld to put a marble tile back to back with a granite tile and then put craft foam on the marble side, it is better than nothing, but I cant help but wonder if I could do better somehow. There is a stone shop between Harbor Freight, and Tandy I'm going to check on some scrap next time I'm over there. Quote
Members Ole South Posted March 2, 2015 Members Report Posted March 2, 2015 Nope, no give, no bounce. I tool and skive on it and use it with wet/dry sandpaper for wide blade sharpening. Works good and the price is right. Weighs a fraction of what a 1.5-2" slab would. Initially I planned on putting a Hi-den particle board under a slab but ran across a clearance sale of marble and granite at Home Depot first. I figured I'd try it and if it didn't work out, no harm done. Use thin-set next time T-phant, it's cheap and fun to play with. If you don't have a tile trowel just cut some 1/4" v's in a piece of scrap plastic. The furrows are important. Gave the white one to a friend of mine. Haven't gotten a complaint yet! Quote
Members AztecLeatherWorks Posted March 2, 2015 Members Report Posted March 2, 2015 Nice looking pieces. One caution: Don't use pieces that are too thin. I made that mistake and busted the piece. The first one I used was just under an inch. I now use one that is 2 inches thick. That thing will never fail! Happy stamping! Quote
Members Ole South Posted March 2, 2015 Members Report Posted March 2, 2015 You've got a point Aztec but I don't use my slab as an anvil. I have a piece of 3/8" steel, an arbor press and an ASO* for that. I use it as a leather "machined true surface" and only use mallets < 16oz with it. Once chipped, cracked or damaged I cannot resurface a stone regardless of thickness. Bear-in-mind I built it with weight and functionality in mind. Understanding the scope as well as the limitation of your tool is the beginning of craftsmanship. For anyone building one of these don't try and use too thin a base or too flexible a material for the base as it might flex, Always use it on a flat surface. I believe I sealed and lightly sanded the particle board base before applying the thin-set since it is water based. Trowel the binder (thin-set or epoxy) using a spreader with equally spaced "teeth" so as to get an even thickness of binder as well as leaving space for it to flow. This isn't any different than laying ceramic tile. You just don't have any grout lines to fill. *ASO - Anvil Shaped Object Quote
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