






💎 Elevate Your Polish Game to Diamond-Level Perfection!
TechDiamondTools Diamond Powder offers ultra-fine 200,000 grit synthetic diamonds sized 0-0.1 microns, delivering superior polishing performance for glass, stone, metal, and more. Made in the USA with exceptional purity and uniformity, this 5-gram (25 carat) pack is perfect for both professional and DIY polishing applications, ensuring flawless finishes and long-lasting durability.
| ASIN | B00I5APF8E |
| Best Sellers Rank | #147,877 in Arts, Crafts & Sewing ( See Top 100 in Arts, Crafts & Sewing ) #154 in Jewelry Making Polishing & Buffing |
| Brand | TechDiamondTools |
| Brand Name | TechDiamondTools |
| Compatible Material | Aluminum, Ceramic, Glass, Leather, Metal, Plastic, Stone, Wood |
| Customer Reviews | 4.4 out of 5 stars 315 Reviews |
| Grit Material | Diamond |
| Grit Material Type | Diamond |
| Grit Number | 200 |
| Grit Type | Ultra Fine |
| Item Dimensions | 7 x 4.5 x 0.2 inches |
| Item Weight | 5 Grams |
| Item dimensions L x W x H | 7 x 4.5 x 0.2 inches |
| Manufacturer | TechDiamondTools |
| Material | Diamond |
| Material Type | Diamond |
| UPC | 818510010453 |
| Unit Count | 1 Count |
S**4
Great for stropping cutting tools - Use on leather or balsa
This TechDiamondTools diamond powder works great on a balsa lap (I use Sig 3/8" hard balsa 3" wide) and on leather (kangaroo is best for finishing strops) I have 3 grits set up on balsa and roo leather, it covers my Pfeil woodcarving chisels and knives as well as working great on any good knife or blade. Clear, soft pine from the home center works OK in a pinch too! (you can pay for the powder by saving your used Xacto blades - they will sharpen right up better than new) The balsa works great for making dedicated contours for gouges and V-tools. Use a bit of mineral oil to encourage adhesion and add a knife tip of diamond powder to the lap and work in by using the strop or lap, then add a spritz of mineral oil (50% thinner, 50% oil -- acetone or lacquer thinner) in a pump sprayer makes application easier, but a few drops of the mineral oil spread over the powdered surface with a fingertip after working the powder in by using it for a blade or 2 does the job as well. I use .5 - 1um (50,000) for finishing/fine work, 6 - 12um (1500) for general and edge maintenance work and 38 -45um (325) for roughing/repair work. I do believe the fine powder I'm using is a bit too fine, it works great, but is probably slower than a slightly coarser grit would be. If you only are going to use one grit, the 6-12um would be the pick for most sharpening, on cowhide will work great for most jobs, just use light pressure to avoid compression of the leather and 'hooking' the blade edge. Kangaroo leather is harder and has a tighter face (no sweat glands I understand is the reason) which helps prevent the leather from compressing which cause it the wrap around the edge, causing it to deflect. In my experience the roo leather is better, but pretty expensive. Good bovine leather works great, just be mindful of how much pressure you use during final strokes. This powder has proven to be great stuff and goes along way (I'm generous with it, and for these prices, you can afford to be). It' much cheaper than all the diamond sprays and you end up with a lot more diamond on your strop. I haven't tried it yet, but I believe you could add it to the 50% oil spray and it would work well, just shake hard before using. I think commercial sprays are nothing but water with a dash of diamond powder, so you could try that too. One last tip, this system puts a great final polish on your carbide lathe tools (great for HSS too!), you can get a mirror polish on them if you wish to, and it pays off in the ease with which they cut and the surface finish produced. Remember to polish the top as well as the flank side. Rough grind the carbide to shape with a resinoid or plated diamond wheel, then work through the grits of diamond powder to produce a "super cutter" for your lathe (or mill). Sharpening hobbyists will love this powder - Happy sharpening guys!
J**1
Great for Home Made Stropping Compound
These are high quality diamonds with a high level of consistency. I've checked them under a microscope and can confirm this. I use it to make my own stropping compound for stropping knives and it works great. USA made and highly recommended!
T**K
400 grit diamond powder.
Very good. I will purchase here again.
A**R
its fine
Amazon needs to stop forcing us to write things in the comment box, or they will continue to get messages like this when no comments are necessary. The product was fine, no problems, no issues.
B**D
Excellent results!
I use this product as stropping spray for sharpening my knives. You can spend $50-80 and get a decent compound/spray, or you can make you own with some rubbing alcohol and $5 of diamond powder. I have found that this method works much better at a fraction of the cost. I highly recommend this product.
D**L
As described
As described
C**.
Great Product & Price
This product was exactly the product and quality I expected from my order. I use it when it comes to my cutlery on my leather strop to assist in stropping, it works fantastic. I highly recommend this product.
T**R
Magic Dust
I've been using this product on a leather board-mounted strop to sharpen and polish knife blades. Recently acquired a second hand Fallkniven A1 with some unfortunate scratches on it, which buffed out beautifully and more quickly than I expected. Diamond cuts fast and the super fine particles bring up a brilliant shine. Handling the material is a little tricky, being so fine. A wooden coffee stirrer works to dip it out of the wee baggie. A few drops of isopropyl alcohol help distribute the powder. Takes very little to cover the strop. I'm looking forward to finding more uses for this nifty product.
Trustpilot
2 months ago
3 days ago