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Discuss Hand polishing mitred edges-Travertine in the Specialist Tile -Stone, Porcelain, Glass area at TilersForums.com.

Miles

TF
0
58
Sheffield
Hi, I have cut my mitred edges of some fairly brittle travertine and I'm not happy with the finish so I have not fixed them yet and thought I would see if any of you guys can offer any advice? The ones with actual chunks off have been recut but there is still a roughness to them as obviously its a brittle tile being cut to a very thin finish. I want to give the customer a close to perfect finish as I can. I'm thinking a fine sand paper used by hand? Any better suggestions? Anything I try will be done by hand.
 
O

Old Mod

Cut your tile to desired length with a straight cut, then cut your 45o, but leave 2mm on the leading edge, as diagram.
Then you can use something like Sait carborundum pads to hand finish before you bring the pieces together.
It will then create a 'birds beak' a V shape if you will.
This gives you a good joint to grout, and it will give it some strength.

IMG_7706.PNG

You can get Sait pads from ATS
SAIT Plain Silicon Carbide Discs 125mm | ATS Diamond Tools - http://www.atsdiamondtools.co.uk/node/56
 
C

Concrete guy

If it's only a few edges you need to do a few sheets of wet and dry at different grits would probably do what you need. There's no need to buy a load of Silicon Carbide discs for a one off, it's worth buying them though if it's a reasonably regular thing.

I was never keen on mitres on travertine due to it's brittle nature. I always preferred to overlap the edge and square polish with maybe a micro bevel. It effectively gives the same end appearance and is more resilient to knocks.
 

Kyle Knowles

TF
Esteemed
Arms
1,050
1,108
Widnes
Cut your tile to desired length with a straight cut, then cut your 45o, but leave 2mm on the leading edge, as diagram.
Then you can use something like Sait carborundum pads to hand finish before you bring the pieces together.
It will then create a 'birds beak' a V shape if you will.
This gives you a good joint to grout, and it will give it some strength.

View attachment 86529

You can get Sait pads from ATS
SAIT Plain Silicon Carbide Discs 125mm | ATS Diamond Tools - http://www.atsdiamondtools.co.uk/node/56
That is exactly what I was getting at
 

Kyle Knowles

TF
Esteemed
Arms
1,050
1,108
Widnes
If it's only a few edges you need to do a few sheets of wet and dry at different grits would probably do what you need. There's no need to buy a load of Silicon Carbide discs for a one off, it's worth buying them though if it's a reasonably regular thing.

I was never keen on mitres on travertine due to it's brittle nature. I always preferred to overlap the edge and square polish with maybe a micro bevel. It effectively gives the same end appearance and is more resilient to knocks.
20160915_162103.jpg
 

Kyle Knowles

TF
Esteemed
Arms
1,050
1,108
Widnes
Cut your tile to desired length with a straight cut, then cut your 45o, but leave 2mm on the leading edge, as diagram.
Then you can use something like Sait carborundum pads to hand finish before you bring the pieces together.
It will then create a 'birds beak' a V shape if you will.
This gives you a good joint to grout, and it will give it some strength.

View attachment 86529

You can get Sait pads from ATS
SAIT Plain Silicon Carbide Discs 125mm | ATS Diamond Tools - http://www.atsdiamondtools.co.uk/node/56
IMG-20161112-WA0005.jpeg
 
Cut your tile to desired length with a straight cut, then cut your 45o, but leave 2mm on the leading edge, as diagram.
Then you can use something like Sait carborundum pads to hand finish before you bring the pieces together.
It will then create a 'birds beak' a V shape if you will.
This gives you a good joint to grout, and it will give it some strength.

View attachment 86529

You can get Sait pads from ATS
SAIT Plain Silicon Carbide Discs 125mm | ATS Diamond Tools - http://www.atsdiamondtools.co.uk/node/56
This diagram is exactly what I needed. I want to thank you for sharing this. This has saved me much grief and stress.
 

hk940

Arms
13
98
NC, USA
Hi, I have cut my mitred edges of some fairly brittle travertine and I'm not happy with the finish so I have not fixed them yet and thought I would see if any of you guys can offer any advice? The ones with actual chunks off have been recut but there is still a roughness to them as obviously its a brittle tile being cut to a very thin finish. I want to give the customer a close to perfect finish as I can. I'm thinking a fine sand paper used by hand? Any better suggestions? Anything I try will be done by hand.
I would suggest using diamond pads instead of sandpaper, sand paper might do the job depending how hard the travertine is.
If you can buy from Amazon, go there and do search for diamond pads. You can get a set of 6-8 grits for a reasonable price, This one is $23.00 https://www.amazon.com/Diamond-Poli...jbGlja1JlZGlyZWN0JmRvTm90TG9nQ2xpY2s9dHJ1ZQ==
 
L

Larry o Neill

Hi, I have cut my mitred edges of some fairly brittle travertine and I'm not happy with the finish so I have not fixed them yet and thought I would see if any of you guys can offer any advice? The ones with actual chunks off have been recut but there is still a roughness to them as obviously its a brittle tile being cut to a very thin finish. I want to give the customer a close to perfect finish as I can. I'm thinking a fine sand paper used by hand? Any better suggestions? Anything I try will be done by hand.
Thanks, customer specified mitred corners. Out of curiosity what is best way of doing external corners??
 

Lou

Admin
Staff member
Esteemed
866
1,473
Staffordshire

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