What's everyone's thoughts, and experience and/or knowledge with this material?
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-ZxcO71C5Sg
Fred588 wrote:I am not a geologist but I can provide some feedback. Terms such as "dus,t" "silt,"and "clay" refer most directly to particle size. Whether or not something of this sort will make a good mud pit, however, the kind of rock will also make a major difference. With the bentonite clay I use at Studio 588, for example, the term "bentonte" refers to a specific mineral. Actually there are different kinds of bentonite as well. Bentonite swells when it gets wet. Some minerals might have undesirable properties. Coal, for example, is organic, so it might have ingredients that could be toxic.
One thing that might be very positive, could be the price. The video shows the dust being sprayed over farmland as an additive, so I woud expect the proce to be fairly low.
hiimawesome wrote:I looked into this and had a hard time sourcing it in the southwest United States. Seems like a northern thing.
I vaguely recall something about powdered shale and silica being in the rocks and it's fuckin horrid for your lungs.
Seems fun though, results may vary.
Theo wrote:Fred588 wrote:I am not a geologist but I can provide some feedback. Terms such as "dus,t" "silt,"and "clay" refer most directly to particle size. Whether or not something of this sort will make a good mud pit, however, the kind of rock will also make a major difference. With the bentonite clay I use at Studio 588, for example, the term "bentonte" refers to a specific mineral. Actually there are different kinds of bentonite as well. Bentonite swells when it gets wet. Some minerals might have undesirable properties. Coal, for example, is organic, so it might have ingredients that could be toxic.
One thing that might be very positive, could be the price. The video shows the dust being sprayed over farmland as an additive, so I woud expect the proce to be fairly low.
Interesting points: what you get depends on where it comes from, and the price, I thought about mentioning that but I forgot. Question is, where to source it? You can find bags of rock dust on gardeners supply sites, but aside from maybe testing purposes it'd be too expensive in bulk, and perhaps not the same as what you'd find locally. So I'm assuming you just go straight to the quarry, like buying gravel, or maybe a farmers supply store?hiimawesome wrote:I looked into this and had a hard time sourcing it in the southwest United States. Seems like a northern thing.
I vaguely recall something about powdered shale and silica being in the rocks and it's fuckin horrid for your lungs.
Seems fun though, results may vary.
Bentonite clay is horrible for your lungs, but you're not supposed to inhale it, the idea is to add water and sink in it
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