Here I come to add to the confusion. The last time the topic of abrasive scale conversions came up, a few other sites were listed. Here's one:
http://www.facetingmachines.com/grit-mesh-micron.shtml You'll notice that the scale there does not match up with the scales in the links provided so far in this thread. I believe that the one in the link above is correct as far as it goes. It does not include "p-metric". I don't believe that "mesh" is the same as "grit". I don't know what "US CAMI" from the Mirka chart means. Is it the same as grit? At the same time that the discussion was going on before that provided me with the link above, there was another link to somewhere on the 3M site (I no longer have that link) that gave the following: 3 micron=1500 grit, 12 micron=750 grit, 26 micron=380 grit. Elsewhere on the 3M site, the following was given: 9 micron=1200 grit, 15 micron=600 grit, 20 micron=500 grit, 30 micron=400 grit, and 40 micron=320 grit. You'll notice that the two scales from 3M don't even make sense compared to each other. I wish I still had the 3M links, but I just wrote the info down when I looked at them, and I don't have the links anymore.
I don't have any idea what to believe. I have seen in several places in Ebonite literature that 15 micron=1200 grit, and I've been going by that, but that could easily be incorrect. This mess is unbelievable. I would really like to hear from somebody in the abrasives business who would be willing to give a complete and highly detailed explanation and comparison between all these scales, with the explanation including why all these discrepancies seem to exist between different companies' versions of these scales. I'd be willing to pay for this person's time.
Shiv
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Listening to the monotonous staccato of rain on my desk topEdited on 7/5/2003 5:31 PM