Quantcast

Ch. 23: How to Find Gravity & Hardness

Ch. 22: Hardness Page of 237 Ch. 23: How to Find Gravity & Hardness Text size:minus plus Restore normal size   Mail page  Print this page
XXIII
HOW TO FIND THE SPECIFIC GRAVITY AND HARDNESS OF STONES
To obtain the specific gravity of a stone, first thoroughly cleanse it, removing all grease and air-bubbles. As the Kohl-busch pocket-scale is in most general use among jewellers, it is presumed that it will be used in the experiment. Weigh the stone, noting the exact weight to the smallest fraction. Then loop one of the cords by which one of the pans is suspended through the ring from which it hangs, so that it will hang sideways without interfering with the balance of the scales. Take a thin silken thread, double it, make a double loop at one end that will hold the stone and suspend it from the ring to which the pan is attached; or, better still, take a fine alu­minum wire, bend it at one end to an open stud spiral, to a hook at the other; put the stone to be weighed in the spiral and hook the wire to the ring from which the pan is sus­pended. Place under it a wide-mouthed vial of convenient size (about two and a half inches high, with a half-inch open­ing) containing distilled water at 6o° F., and, hanging the stone immersed in this, weigh it again. Deduct the weight of the wire. Then divide the first weight (in air) by the dif­ference between the first and second weights (second in water), and the result will be the specific gravity. Be sure that the stone hangs free and is completely immersed when it is weighed.
To find the hardness of a stone use a finely tempered steel
point upon an under facet near the girdle. This will bite with
growing difficulty until quartz is reached. The higher the
tone which comes from the scratching, the harder the stone.
182
Ch. 22: Hardness Page of 237 Ch. 23: How to Find Gravity & Hardness
Suggested Illustrations
Other Chapters you may find useful
Other Books on this topic
bullet Tag
This Page