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Granite Repairs
Last Post 28 Aug 2008 02:03 PM by Kowboy. 37 Replies.
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Kowboy
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19 Aug 2008 11:01 AM  
With work as slow as it is in Michigan, I had to get into the granite repair business. The stoners may laugh at me, but I bought one of these repair kits:

http://195.3.105.188/invicon/index_en.html

Most stoners think you can repair anything with super glue. The only problem is that super glue doesn't have ultraviolet light stability, so it can yellow in sunlight. So unless your repaired tops aren't under a window and your repair only has to last until the check clears, you're probably good to go with c.a.

Here are some sink chips I've repaired with my fancy new kit:
Heat not a furnace for your foe so hot That it do singe yourself. - William Shakespeare
Adam
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19 Aug 2008 07:42 PM  
I have the same kit. I will admit that it has saved my behind on more than a few occasions. The reason that i bought mine was the ability that it gave me to do some serious repairs in estone. The price was pretty steep but it was worth everyone of my hard earned dollars.
miles
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19 Aug 2008 08:44 PM  
Joe,

What kind of kit? I haven't seen it.
It's a rock for God's sake!
Kowboy
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19 Aug 2008 09:36 PM  

Miles:

Braxton-Bragg or Granquartz sells them. I've seen them at the shows.

Click on this link: http://195.3.105.188/invicon/index_en.html

Joe

P.S.:

Click on the link in my first post.

 

Heat not a furnace for your foe so hot That it do singe yourself. - William Shakespeare
miles
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20 Aug 2008 06:41 AM  
Sorry Joe,

I missed the link and went straight for the pictures.

Thanks
It's a rock for God's sake!
revans1
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20 Aug 2008 07:18 PM  
I am very, very hesitant to do this, but I thought of you guys (all the fabnetters) when I saw this gardenweb thread. Here is a photo of a quartz patch on a brand-new top:

Photobucket

What do you think?
Randy

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Adam
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20 Aug 2008 07:39 PM  
I am not sure of anything to call that other than hideous. I wouldn't have ever tried to pass that one off. Nothing like that will ever leave my shop looking like that. Is quality even an issue for some fabricators anymore?
Andy
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20 Aug 2008 08:27 PM  
That is unacceptable and the fabricator needs to have a talkin with.  This is the problem with fabricators or companies that don't care about the quality of the product they install.  It give the product a bad name.

Is the customer accepting that?  What material is it?  Looks like Cambria.
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revans1
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20 Aug 2008 08:45 PM  
Silestone, according to the homeowner. 
Randy

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Kowboy
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20 Aug 2008 09:48 PM  

Color blindness in more prevalent in males, so that repair must have been done by a guy. Before he had his cataract surgery and his glasses were broken. The sun was in his eyes too. No, the power was out and he did the repair in the dark, yeah, that's the ticket.

Joe

P.S.:

Randy, thanks for posting.

Heat not a furnace for your foe so hot That it do singe yourself. - William Shakespeare
Tom M
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20 Aug 2008 10:08 PM  
That right there? You know how when you get into a talk with another fabricator, and you're trying to find some way to explain just how businesses without conscience are killing a great industry, and destroying good product reputations? You know, that kind of thing? Where you're just trying to come up with an example to show how p'ed off you are?

That's the photo. That one.
"Our doubts are traitors and make us lose the good we oft might win, by fearing to attempt." - Shakespeare
Kowboy
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20 Aug 2008 10:22 PM  

Here are some pictures I took today of a practice granite repair. Thanks to Dani Homrich for the shop space, the Estone Restorer and all the advice.

First is the unbroken piece, second is after breaking, third is glued with an Integra clear /Avonite translucent white mix and Dani-clamped, fourth is the repaired piece and fifth is the repaired piece in the most unfavorable light I could find. The repair is just to the left of the power line reflection which goes right through the middle.

I welcome all criticism, as long as it is accompanied by photographs of your first granite break repair attempt too.

Joe

Heat not a furnace for your foe so hot That it do singe yourself. - William Shakespeare
Andy
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21 Aug 2008 02:20 AM  
Were you able to get the two pieces of material to line up on the deck?
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Kowboy
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21 Aug 2008 08:18 AM  
Posted By Andy on 08/21/2008 2:20 AM
Were you able to get the two pieces of material to line up on the deck?
Andy:

Here is a picture of the pieces realigned after breaking but befroe gluing:

Heat not a furnace for your foe so hot That it do singe yourself. - William Shakespeare
Karl Crooks
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21 Aug 2008 09:45 AM  
Posted By revans1 on 08/20/2008 7:18 PM
I am very, very hesitant to do this, but I thought of you guys (all the fabnetters) when I saw this gardenweb thread. Here is a photo of a quartz patch on a brand-new top:

Photobucket

What do you think?

We have seen alot of spot repairs like that on Granite and Marble. Many times its like they dont even try to match a color !!! This one looks like a bad Stone repair was tried on a Quartz top.  Very sad !
RESTORE ~ RENEW ~ REJOICE !
David G.
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21 Aug 2008 10:57 AM  

It's been said every artist weaves a flaw into there work as a sign of humility.

 

(where is the shirking away icon)

DON"T LET WILDLIFE RUN RAMPANT! (Walter Hickel)
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Kowboy
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21 Aug 2008 07:12 PM  
Since I was critical of the previously posted estone repair, it is only fair that I post one of mine, my first test of my fancy new kit

I picked a color and particulate that was similar to the previous Silestone. This is Cambria Victoria.

This was a sink cut-out so I took a belt sander to the edge and made a profile. The first picture is the original edge.

In the second picture, Dani Homrich knocked the corner off and I got rid of the frayed edges and cut in some anchor slots with a dremel tool.

Third, I taped the edge and light cured the basic fill color. After curing, I dremeled in "particulate" holes.

Fourth is the picture of the deck. You can see it has big black spots and some spots with no particulate. The repair is in context with the deck.

Fifth is a close-up of the repair. Yeah, it isn't perfect, but this was my first attempt. Next time I will fill to capacity and not hold back for clear filler on top like you do with granite for depth. When I added the clear, it added too much depth to the estone. I will also make separate "particulates" and add them to the base in separate "lifts" so my particulates don't blur as they did here.

I hit it with a twenty micron and some Estone Restorer and you can't feel it.

I'll let readers decide if this is an acceptable repair or not. I think it depends on who made the chip. I can gaurantee if a college kid had a party and broke mom and dad's top, this repair would look terrific to him.

Joe
Heat not a furnace for your foe so hot That it do singe yourself. - William Shakespeare
Brian Briggs
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21 Aug 2008 09:21 PM  
I never believed in the cost of the Stone Lux kit until I seen it in action. One of my contractors broke an antique bench. The homeowners flew an art/historical stone restoration specialist. He worked on the bench at my shop so I was able to see the kit in action. If you really want to get into restoration, the kit is worth the dough.
Andy
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22 Aug 2008 12:22 AM  
Not bad repair.  Try tinting the clear so that it is translucent.  This may pick up some of the color of the material.
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Kowboy
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22 Aug 2008 06:49 PM  

I did a second attempt today and produced a perfectly acceptable estone edge repair. I'm sure everyone would agree if only my photographic skills were equal.

The first picture is the chipped edge, the second is the finished repair for easy comparison.

The third is a picture of my gluing an unmatched chip into the hole. I crushed some estone, sorting out the chip colors that didn't match the base color and ground the rest to nearly sand. I blew the sand through my fingers to blow out the gray cement. I mixed the remaining sand with Avonite Translucent White methelmethacrylate. On my next try, I will color match the adhesive more closely.

I ground the proud piece flush with a 36 grit on my Festool on Rotex and sanded with progressively smaller grits until I changed to the Rotex polishing pad with a 20 micron diamond. This is picture four.

I put a diamond point in my dremel and over the top of the glue line, carved in holes for the black and brown "particulates" which I did with my light kit. I finished polished with Estone Restorer.

Picture five is the repair in the most demanding light.

Joe

Heat not a furnace for your foe so hot That it do singe yourself. - William Shakespeare
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