this post was submitted on 25 Mar 2026
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Cool Rocks

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Minerals are cool, too.

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When I discovered the beige rocks on the left side, which had been in the tumbler for about two weeks, weren't going to be interesting, I switched them out for the smokey quartz and a few other things I'm not sure of on the right, which have been in for less than a day. The quartz in the middle were tumbled with the beige rocks. I included those in the new batch, too.

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[โ€“] Masterkraft0r@discuss.tchncs.de 0 points 1 month ago (1 children)

are there any (hard) rocks that don't tumble well? like i get that chalk or soft limestone or something might not be the brightest idea. but have you tried anything except crystals? i'd be interested how e.g. gneiss or granite tumble. i mean it's obviously dependend on the specific rock but still

[โ€“] Wren@lemmy.today 2 points 1 month ago

I'm still new to this so my experience is limited.

I did some lapis lazuli with the specific purpose of collecting the sludge to make paint, so I used steel balls instead of tumbling media - it worked but it was clear they would take a very long time. Lapis lazuli is a hard rock.

Kyanite is another I wanted to destroy, a softer, mica-like rock, and it fell apart easily.

I try to tumble similar size and hardness rocks and just happen to have a lot of quartz right now. Jade and serpentine do well in the tumbler, too.