The first
sign of maturity in life is when One is prepared to listen to the other point
of view and not put across their own in a brash / abrasive manner !! My first
encounter with ‘abrasive’ people (who were extremely nice!) was four decades ago in 1984 !!
Abrasive: adjective : 1. rough and likely to scratch. சொரசொரப்பான. கரடுமுரடான. உராய்கிற. கீறல் ஏற்படுத்தக்கூடிய. 2. (used about a person) rude and rather aggressive. (ஒருவரைப் பற்றிக் கூறும்போது) முரட்டுத்தனமான முனைப்புடைய. சண்டையிடும் தன்மையுள்ள.
In a Civil
society one should not be brash and avoid abrasive behavior in words,
thought and action. The great
Thiruvalluvar advises to control anger and be friendly always :
கதங்காத்துக் கற்றடங்கல் ஆற்றுவான் செவ்வி
அறம்பார்க்கும் ஆற்றின் நுழைந்து.
கல்வி கற்று மனத்துள் கோபம் பிறக்காமல் காத்து, அடக்கமாக வாழும் ஆற்றல் படைத்தவனை அடைவதற்கான நேரத்தை எதிர்பார்த்து அறம் அவன் வழியில் நுழைந்து காத்து இருக்கும். No Thirukkural or advise post but on an equipment, a trade – which slowly has lost its way - the Abrasive business for household !!
Cutting edge – may refer to ‘State of the art’, the highest level of development, as of a device, technique, or scientific field… the real cutting edge ‘Abrasive’ when used as an Adjective would mean : 1) tending to rub or graze the skin 2) harsh, showing little concern for the feelings of others.
Every skill needs to be honed … honing is the finishing process where the burrs formed from the sharpening process are removed and a sharpened knife is finished to a fine edge. Honing is also used to maintain the edge in-between sharpening. Honing does not actually sharpen a knife. Instead, honing straightens, cleans, and polishes the edge of an already sharp knife. The smaller the angle between the blade and stone, the sharper the knife will be, but the less side force is needed to bend the edge over or chip it off.
Middle aged people will remember that till a few years ago, on the streets of Chennai (and elsewhere too) pedlars would come shouting ‘saanai’ (sharpening !) – a peculiar contraption of a wooden case, a cycle wheel, a sharpening abrasive and more …. Not sure whether you spot them still – or in tune with the modern times of ‘throwaways’ … perhaps people are changing kitchen knives (aruvalmanai – the contraption used in Tamil Nadu for cutting vegetables and the like !) and other sharp tools ….
Diamond, as one would know is a common abrasive. Even softer minerals like calcium carbonate are used as abrasives, such as "polishing agents" in toothpaste. An abrasive is a material, often a mineral, that is used to shape or finish a workpiece through rubbing which leads to part of the workpiece being worn away. Abrasives are extremely commonplace and are used very extensively in a wide variety of industrial, domestic, and technological applications. Common uses for abrasives include grinding, polishing, buffing, honing, cutting, drilling, sharpening, lapping, and sanding. Abrasives generally rely upon a difference in hardness between the abrasive and the material being worked upon, the abrasive being the harder of the two substances.
A bonded abrasive is composed of an abrasive material contained within a matrix, although very fine aluminium oxide abrasive may comprise sintered material. This matrix is called a binder and is often a clay, a resin, a glass or a rubber. This mixture of binder and abrasive is typically shaped into blocks, sticks, or wheels. Grinding wheels are cylinders that are rotated at high speed.
The one I had written
about in earlier para is worked with a foot pedal – in industrial processes
there could be electric motors driving the wheel too. There are very huge sized
grinding wheels, depending upon the usage.
Such wheels need to be constructed to withstand greater radial stress to
prevent the wheel flying apart as it spins. While the man on streets doing
‘saanai’ – the professional sharpener may not attract people, unless there is a
need for sharpening the knife or aruvalmanai at home, I have always been
fascinated by this contraption – for this industry was my first job.
In the
Parrys Corner, opposite to Madras High Court and nearer the (once) famous
Ramakrishna Sweets, is a small lane – Francis Joseph Street. My first job
immediately finishing graduation was in that lane in a Company (R. Subbaraman
& Co, No. 11 of Francis Joseph St) – sole selling Agents for Cutfast Bonded
Abrasives – which had factory
in Pallikaranai, manufacturing bonded abrasives – wheels and more in big
sizes. They had another Office that was
dealing in Coated abrasives like emery sheet and the like. Understand that Cutfast at some later point of time was taken over by
Carborundum Universal
Manufacturing. My boss was extremely
inspiring person (Mr Subramanian, tall and classy
moustached man, who had worked as a
Forest Range Officer) … though not a very big Office – everything was
impressive about that Office – I was so
fascinated working in that Office – albeit briefly (May to Dec 1984) before
embarking on a career in General insurance in Oriental Insurance. I remember my colleagues at that time – Sundaram, Viswanathan, Ramakrishnan,
Radhakrishnan, Srinivasan, Krishnan, Ramasubramanian – though not in touch with
any of them now.
No. 11 Francis Joseph St,, opp to High Court – a decade ago !
14.7.2025



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