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Notes on the cleaving and sawing of diamond

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  14 March 2018

Extract

It seems to be a peculiarity in the history of the diamond that from time to time operations which have been known from time immemorial are re-invented and claimed to be new. For instance, cleaving, which is said to have been known to the Indians, was discovered again by W. H. Wollaston. It is obvious, too, that cleaving was already known to A. B. de Boodt in 1604. The same applies to the sawing of gems by a thin rotating disk, which seems to be as old as the engraver's treadle lathe (earliest reference about 1520) ; but this art does not seem to have been applied to diamonds, as the first reference to diamond sawing with a thin rotating blade is that in 1874. All previous references seem to be to the sawing of diamonds with a thin wire moistened with a paste of diamond dust and oil, and otherwise designated as the Chinese method. Other gemstones, were always sawn with thin disks on lapidaries' benches with vertical spindle. Similar remarks may be applied to bruting and drilling, but only polishing seems to have always been recognized as the main operation.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © The Mineralogical Society of Great Britain and Ireland 1944

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References

page 45 note 3 Sutton, J. R., The diamond, a descriptive treatise. London, 1928, pp. 1617. [M.A. 4–6.]Google Scholar

page 46 note 1 Grodzinski, P., Diamond geometry. Industrial Diamond Review, 1944, vol. 4, pp. 4953.Google Scholar

page 46 note 2 Kayser, J. F., The micro-topography of diamond... Industrial Diamond Review, 1944, vol. 4, pp. 24, 72–75. Fig. 4, p. 73, shows the interference fringes on a sawn surface of diamond. [M.A. 9–49.]Google Scholar

page 46 note 3 New quartz sawing machine. Industrial Diamond Review, 1944, vol. 4, pp. 63–64.

page 46 note 4 P. Grodzinski, Provisional Patent Application, 21704, 1943.

page 50 note 1 P. Grodzinski, Diamond and gem stone industrial production. London, 1942. [M.A. 8–266.]