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Ch. 4: The Cutting of Gems

Ch. 4: The Cutting of Gems Page of 311 Ch. 4: The Cutting of Gems Text size:minus plus Restore normal size   Mail page  Print this page
PRECIOUS STONES.
61
in a steel mortar furnished with a well-fitting cylindrical pestle of steel, the dust being used in the same way as that from bruting. The impure variety of Diamond, called Bort, is also extensively used and also the finely granular opaque variety, Carbonado. Bort is harder than the pure crystal­lised variety, and Carbonado is as hard or harder, and is also less brittle than the pure Diamond.
The abrasive agent is mixed with a little olive oil in a capsule and a small quantity of the mixture applied to the upper surface of the lap or skief. The clamp with the dop in position is then lowered so that the gem rests on the lap. The position must, of course, be accurately adjusted to grind the stone in the desired plane; usually one operator manipulates four dops, placed equally distant round the lap so as to distribute the pressure evenly. As before men­tioned, the clamps are weighted with lead weights to give sufficient pressure, without which the work would progress much more slowly. With a given weight it is obvious that the pressure on a given area will be less with a large facet than with a small, since the same total force is applied over a larger area in the former case than in the latter; hence to maintain an even pressure the weights must be altered. The weights applied vary from 2 to 30 lbs.
As an instance of the importance of having a proper speed, it may be recalled that in the cutting of the Koh-i-noor the work was being done with the wheel at 2,400 revolutions per minute. When the cutters came to one part, however, no progress seemed to be made; greater pressure was applied, with the result that particles of the iron disc, mixed with oil and diamond-powder, became ignited, and then the solder began to melt. At one
Ch. 4: The Cutting of Gems Page of 311 Ch. 4: The Cutting of Gems
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