The rocks on the right are the same types of rocks after tumbling. The rocks on the left are crushed pieces of (from top to bottom) brown jasper, rose quartz, green aventurine, amethyst, and tiger's-eye. Rocks: Before and After Tumbling: This photo shows rocks before and after tumbling. Most of their tumblers can be repaired or refurbished with readily available parts. Thumler's and Lortone parts are still manufactured today. Instead of being made with plastic, hobbyist tumblers are made from metal and other durable materials. Many people received a hobbyist tumbler by Thumler's or Lortone as a gift when they were a child and are now using that same tumbler with their grandchildren! Successful products persist in the marketplace. Two brands, Thumler's Tumblers and Lortone, are still being manufactured today with very little change to their basic design. Hobbyist tumblers were first made in the late 1950s. They typically tumble between two and ten pounds of rock. They operate quietly because they have a rubber barrel or a metal barrel lined with rubber. Most are made with a metal frame and a quality motor designed to operate for years. Hobbyist tumblers typically sell for between $70 and $300, depending mainly upon their size. Model B tumblers have been manufactured by the Tru-Square Metal Products Company since the 1960s and many of those early tumblers are still in reliable use today. It has a metal barrel with a rubber liner that is large enough to process about ten pounds of rock. It is one of the larger and best hobbyist-grade tumblers. Hobbyist Rock Tumbler: The tumbler shown above is a Thumler's Model B rock tumbler. After following this procedure, the rocks are usually transformed into brightly polished stones. Then the rocks are tumbled for one final week with water and a rock polish. The rocks are typically tumbled for one or two weeks in coarse grit, one week in medium grit, and one week in fine grit, with a thorough cleaning of the rocks and the barrel between each grit size. Tumblers that operate this way are known as "rotary tumblers." This action wears sharp edges off of the rocks and smoothes their surfaces. As the rocks tumble, they grind against one another with particles of the abrasive grit caught between them. The barrel containing rocks, grit, and water is placed on a motorized machine that rotates the barrel to tumble the rocks that are inside. The grit is often labeled "coarse," "medium," and "fine," similar to the different grades of sandpaper. The abrasive grit is a granular material similar to the grains glued onto sandpaper. The most popular tumblers have a barrel that is loaded with rocks, water, and abrasive grit. Visible in this image are fancy jasper, tiger's-eye, carnelian agate, sodalite, banded agate, tree agate, banded amethyst, eye agate, zebra jasper, blue lace agate, blue chalcedony and more. Tumble-Polished Stones: Some examples of nice tumbled stones.
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