Sandpaper: Difference between revisions

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== Sandpaper ==
<gallery>
File:Quick_Change_Disc.jpg|Quick Change Disc
File:Emery_cloth_sheet_-_01.jpg|Emery cloth sheet
File:Assorted_coated_abrasives.JPG|Assorted coated abrasives
File:320_emery_cloth.JPG|320 emery cloth
File:Liivapaber-karedusindeksid.jpg|Liivapaber karedusindeksid
</gallery>

Latest revision as of 21:37, 23 February 2025

Sandpaper is a type of coated abrasive that consists of sheets of paper or cloth with abrasive material glued to one face. Despite the name, sandpaper is not manufactured from sand, but from glass particles, aluminium oxide, silicon carbide, garnet, or other specialist material.

History[edit]

The first recorded use of sandpaper was in 1st-century China when crushed shells, seeds, and sand were bonded to parchment using natural gum. Shark skin (placoid scales) has also been used as an abrasive and the rough scales of the living fossil, Coelacanth are used for the same purpose by the natives of Comoros. Boiled and dried, the rough horsetail plant is used in Japan as a traditional polishing material, finer than sandpaper.

Types and uses[edit]

Sandpaper is produced in a range of grit sizes and is used to remove material from surfaces, either to make them smoother (for example, in painting and wood finishing), to remove a layer of material (such as old paint), or sometimes to make the surface rougher (for example, as a preparation for gluing).

Manufacturing[edit]

The manufacture of sandpaper involves the following steps: making the backing, applying the adhesive, and the abrasive, and creating the sandpaper itself.

See also[edit]

References[edit]

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Sandpaper[edit]