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This is a very fine 'super gem' triplet It doesn't look like much in this picture |
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This is what it looks like from the top Click Here for a much better picture of this beauty. |
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It's a big ugly machine that produces the intricately thin slices. You can't see the blades, but they are carried in a changeable block that allows one to choose the spacing between the blades. The thickness can vary between 70 and 120 slices per inch ! To see these blades up close, Click Here |
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| Not only do you have to have several of the machines, but you also have to have several different blocks of saw blades with different spacings. |
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Here is a parcel of stones which have been selected to
be turned into triplets. To see a better picture of the fire Click Here |
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Here is a parcel of freeform triplets. Freeforms best preserve the pattern and color of the original stone, but they require more manual labor. |
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Of course the most marketable triplets are those which are cut to calibrated
sizes. Unlike the freeform shapes, the final cutting and polishing of rounds
and ovals can be aided by cams and jigs. These are perhaps the most common opal triplets. |
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Copyright 2007, Australian Opal Mines. All rights reserved.
Last modified: July 8, 2007
Murray Willis