I have never seen a 50 000 wheel that looked that rough. The stone looked great. Almost there. Keep the goodness coming. Be happy, safe and stay healthy 😷⚒
I enjoyed watching your breaking in and testing your wheels. They look really really rough and bumpy, especially for a 14,000 grit wheel! Thanks for sharing your knowledge and this how to, with examples! It can help others so much. Those cabbing machines are great and you make it look so easy, its nice to see what it could be like when new!
I've got a few more nice ones that I need to get done and placed into the rock room. I enjoy how cool those agate limbcasts look. I once saw one at a shop that was massive and so perfect. Sadly it wasn't for sale but it was so neat to see!
@@WorldofRockhounds I kept the one you sent that was polished and gave the other one to my rockhounding buddy Cherie. Thanks Kyle! We DO have petrified wood here, My son Cash did find a piece where me and Cherie hunt for geodes but it's rare here. All glacial erratics. Nothing like those limb casts!
I am in the process of breaking in a set of JB super nova wheels...and having trouble doing it. I contacted JB and was told that the bumps have to be completely worn down before the wheel is broken in...and that takes some work...way longer than the 4 or 5 minutes they recommend.
Scratches must be gone at the end of each step. The finer grits, smaller than about 400 will not remove any scratches. Check the stone under magnification for scratches. The stone should have a nice frosty finish with no scratches before you go to the next step.
Your machine is ok. All it does is set there and turn. It's your motor that's the problem. Get a new one...or an old one that is still good...maybe one that's just a little bigger. 1/4 horsepower should be ok.
These are the best wheels I have ever used. Thanks for sharing!
I agree! and you're welcome! Thank you for watching!
I have never seen a 50 000 wheel that looked that rough. The stone looked great. Almost there. Keep the goodness coming. Be happy, safe and stay healthy 😷⚒
It's just the extra resin and luckily it can break in quickly!
Enjoyed watching and learning as I've never worked with NOVA wheels.
:) I hope you get the chance!
I enjoyed watching your breaking in and testing your wheels. They look really really rough and bumpy, especially for a 14,000 grit wheel! Thanks for sharing your knowledge and this how to, with examples! It can help others so much. Those cabbing machines are great and you make it look so easy, its nice to see what it could be like when new!
3 weeks later and I can say that they are being broken it very well! I'm glad that you enjoy watching the video! :)
Hey that first piece you polished looks familiar! I have famous rocks in my collection and that’s awesome! That super agatized wood is so cool!
I've got a few more nice ones that I need to get done and placed into the rock room. I enjoy how cool those agate limbcasts look. I once saw one at a shop that was massive and so perfect. Sadly it wasn't for sale but it was so neat to see!
@@WorldofRockhounds I kept the one you sent that was polished and gave the other one to my rockhounding buddy Cherie. Thanks Kyle! We DO have petrified wood here, My son Cash did find a piece where me and Cherie hunt for geodes but it's rare here. All glacial erratics. Nothing like those limb casts!
I am in the process of breaking in a set of JB super nova wheels...and having trouble doing it. I contacted JB and was told that the bumps have to be completely worn down before the wheel is broken in...and that takes some work...way longer than the 4 or 5 minutes they recommend.
Scratches must be gone at the end of each step. The finer grits, smaller than about 400 will not remove any scratches. Check the stone under magnification for scratches. The stone should have a nice frosty finish with no scratches before you go to the next step.
Your machine is ok. All it does is set there and turn. It's your motor that's the problem. Get a new one...or an old one that is still good...maybe one that's just a little bigger. 1/4 horsepower should be ok.
What he said.