





Do you heat and sand ALL stems to remove "zombie" scratches? I thought you need to do it just after you bend the stem...LatakiaLover wrote: ↑Wed Apr 08, 2020 1:02 am Lower high spots by sanding sideways, not lengthwise.
Such shape-tuning is easiest using those cushioned nail boards. Use the smoother side of a black one to start, move on to a pink one when ALMOST there, and when everything is straight---but not before---work your way up through 400, 600, and 800 sanding lengthwise. Than hit it with a wheel to get some shine happening.
Then HEAT the entire stem with a hot air gun, and when cool sand again with 1000. (Removes "zombie" scratches)
Buff through the compound grades and you're done. It'll look like glass and be as stright as a string if you did everything correctly.
The zombie thing is more dramatic with bents but applies to straights as well. The nearest anyone can figure is "material-removal-class" sanding of ebonite causes a small amount of compression to the surface layer in a microscopic furrow pattern. Compression that's released (in the same way tooth dents are) by heat.miscoipipes wrote: ↑Wed Apr 08, 2020 9:44 am Do you heat and sand ALL stems to remove "zombie" scratches? I thought you need to do it just after you bend the stem...
I always had a problem to remove this tiny micro scratchesLatakiaLover wrote: ↑Wed Apr 08, 2020 11:48 amThe zombie thing is more dramatic with bents but applies to straights as well. The nearest anyone can figure is "material-removal-class" sanding of ebonite causes a small amount of compression to the surface layer in a microscopic furrow pattern. Compression that's released (in the same way tooth dents are) by heat.miscoipipes wrote: ↑Wed Apr 08, 2020 9:44 am Do you heat and sand ALL stems to remove "zombie" scratches? I thought you need to do it just after you bend the stem...
Delicate final sanding with 1000 or 1200 probably still causes them, but ones that are below the "buffing compound threshold." Meaning small enough they polish away.
Whether the above explanation is literally true is unknown as far as I've been able to track down. A materials scientist might just laugh upon reading it. It's a useful way to THINK about the situation, though, because it is FUNCTIONALLY true in a practical shop sense. If approached that way you'll achieve the desired result every time; try to simply sand away the zombies without heat and they'll re-appear eventually every time.