AllExperts > Jewelry Making 
Search      
Jewelry Making
Volunteer
Answers to thousands of questions
 Home · More Jewelry Making Questions · Answer Library  · Encyclopedia ·
More Jewelry Making Answers
Question Library

Ask a question about Jewelry Making
Volunteer
Experts of the Month
Expert Login

Awards

About Us
Tell friends
Link to Us
Disclaimer

 
 
 
 
About Peter Coombs
Expertise
I have over 20 years experience in all forms of handmade jewellery, flatware and holloware in precious metals involoving forging, fabrication and finishing. Also works in aluminium for spectacles and trophies etc

Experience
Many Past/Present clients including: Elton John/Spectacles, la Eyeworks/Spectacles & Jewellery, Lord Mayor of the City of Adelaide/Lord Mayoral Medallion, and many others
 
   

You are here:  Experts > Style > Jewelry Making > Jewelry Making > 14k soldering problem

Jewelry Making - 14k soldering problem


Expert: Peter Coombs - 11/9/2007

Question
hi peter. i am a jeweler by trade and a silversmith by lack of $ for gold ;) I have recently had some 14k castings done and am attempting to solder them with hard plumb solder. so far so good...but when i pickle the pieces the dark brownish oxidation isn't coming off. I am using standard sparex (which has been working fine for the silver) and a white past flux. do i need to use anything special? also, is it ok to tumble-vibe the gold and silver together or do i need to do separate batches for each material? thanks so much!
-gold newbie rachel

Answer
Greetings,

I am unsure of a few of your prodicts, however, I would suggest that you use silver solder at least, which you can obtain from any precious metal or jewellery supply house.
In fact you should be using solder of the same Karat and colour of your metal if you can, but if not, the silver solder will work fine.
I would use a simple 10% sulphuric acid pickle at around 50C. That will clean all oxide and flux, which I suggest should be a tenacity flux...and if yours is working on silver then it shoud be fine on 14K.
As far as I know, mixing metal in the tumbler is fine. The only thing you need to be aware of is that the differnet metals have different hardnesses, so you may find a great finish on one and so so on the other.

Hope that helps, P

Add to this Answer   Ask a Question


 
User Agreement | Privacy Policy | Kids' Privacy Policy | Help
Copyright  © 2008 About, Inc. AllExperts, AllExperts.com, and About.com are registered trademarks of About, Inc. All rights reserved.