
Gemstone Guide
1 Minute Read
This page contains a gemstone guide to common abrasives used near gemstones; their usage, hardness rate and effects compiled by Tom Weishaa CMBJ.
Abrasive
Silicon Carbide
- Usage - A common abrasive found in most mizzy wheels, cut-off discs and some aggressive rubber wheels. Silicon carbide usually appears as small silver flecks of metal.
- Hardness - 9.5
- Effect - Will damage all gemstones. Even diamond under some circumstances.
Aluminum Oxide
- Usage - Common abrasive found in many types of medium cut rubber wheels
- Hardness - 9
- Effect - Will abrade most gemstones
Corundum
- Usage - Common abrasive found in many types of medium cut rubber wheels.
- Hardness - 9
- Effect - Will abrade most gemstones
Ceramic
- Usage - This abrasive is becoming more popular as a fine cut. Often suspended in silicone wheels.
- Hardness - 7.5
- Effect - Will abrade many softer gemstones
Steel Tools
- Usage - Hardened steel tools; files, burs and burnishers are often wrongly used to shape prongs or bezels directly on gemstones.
- Hardness - 7.5
- Effect - This practice can harm all soft stones and can abrade facets junctions on gemstone harder than the steel.
Silicone
- Usage - Once used as a binder, silicone is now becoming popular as a fine-finishing wheel.
- Hardness - 7
- Effect - Will wear down some soft gemstones
Pumice
- Usage - Effective when used to remove tool marks from prongs in close proximity to gemstones.
- Hardness - 5
- Effect - Can be used directly on most gemstones

