Jesstzn
New member
Ron Ketcham said:Abrading is similar to shearing. Just that abrading the surface does the action in smaller steps.
Similar but not the same Ron , look at it this way .. when you shear something its done in one pass and abrading in many passes .. like sanding. Now put it in this light ... if clay in fact abrades the iron filing wouldn't it abrade away the surrounding clear coat first being that the clear is softer that iron? If you have ever sanded a piece of open grain hardwood you will know what I mean. Or pick up a piece of wood that has been out in the prairie and wind blown with sand .... the softer portion of the wood wears away and the harder portion of the grain remains. Same as would happen. Poke a tiny nail in a piece of wood and hammer it in till the head is just above the wood level the cut the head off and hammer the nail flush. Now sand the wood with a very fine piece of sand paper or emery paper and see what happens. If you back the paper with a solid block of wood you may sand everything flat, but clay isn't solid , so what happens is the softer material gets worn away .. the nail may show wear but will become higher than the wood.
Your a logical person .. wouldn't logic presented this way say clay doesn't shear off iron but pulls it out. Also if clay can supposedly shear off or abrade away iron why can't it shear off tree sap? Both sap and iron are adhered to the surface, one is on and one is supposedly in.