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#31 (permalink) |
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Bronze Member
Join Date: Jan 2008
Location: Sidney BC or Denman Island
Posts: 52
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Wet and dry grinder is mostly for sharpening tools like chisels etc.
Get some old steel and clamp it down. Then practise with your new hand grinder rounding edges, cutting grooves, grinding welds. These are great tools in the right hands. They can easily get away if you are not holding it right, with the right pressure etc. I wouldn't want to learn the hard way on a nice new Hydraulic Top Link.
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Kubota B7610 with LA352 FEL, B4672A BH, Bro-tek thumb, BE-5' Box blade |
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#32 (permalink) |
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Bronze Member
Join Date: Jan 2008
Location: Sidney BC or Denman Island
Posts: 52
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My latest addition is the Wire wheels for the hand grinder.
Both the crimp type and the Cup brush with twisted bristles come for a 5/8" thread. I was about to make an adapter when I found one at my local NAPA auto store. 5/8" to 10mm lets all those accesories work on the smaller grinders.
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Kubota B7610 with LA352 FEL, B4672A BH, Bro-tek thumb, BE-5' Box blade |
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#33 (permalink) |
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Epic Contributor
Join Date: Mar 2000
Location: Corinth, TX, USA
Posts: 22,005
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As others have said, you need both. I've had bench grinders many, many years. My current one looks like this one except I have a 6" model instead of 8". If you use an angle grinder, whether electric or air, you need a good vise to hold the item you're working on. I use a 4" vise myself. Down in the country, I had a Craftsman 4.5" electric, but now all I have is a pneumatic angle die grinder which is great for putting a really fine edge on tools.
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#34 (permalink) | |
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Member
Join Date: Feb 2008
Location: Livingston county, Michigan
Posts: 46
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Quote:
Angle grinder if you cannot have both. Paul |
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#35 (permalink) |
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Gold Member
Join Date: Aug 2006
Location: Shelby, NC
Posts: 253
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I have a 9" Milwaukee, a 4 1/2" Dewalt and a $20 special 4 1/2" HF angle grinders. Also a Milwaukee electric die grinder, an 8" Ryobi pedestal mounted bench grinder, and a 6" HF bench grinder (forget that one, Ryobi makes a much better 6" for $10 more!). I often use one of my 21" x 3" belt sanders for sharpening and dressing. Even though I assume they were intended for wood, they work great on steel.
IMHO the 4 1/2 angle grinder is by far the most versatile. Cuts/grinds steel, ceramic tile, bricks, rock, concrete, smooths wood, removes rust, sharpens... Never found a use for a Dremel. Had one, lost it, no remorse. The 1/8" burrs are just too small and the torque isn't there. I use the Milwaukee die grinder with 1/4 " shank cutters or with a 1/8"collet reducer if I really need something small. It'll also spin a 3" cutting disc at 25,000 revs and really do some work. I only recently bought a couple of the Harbor Freight tools. The 4 1/2 HF Chicago Electric angle grinder has been fine. I've actually used it more lately than the Dewalt simply because if I'm going to "let the smoke out of one", I'd rather it be the $20 one. I've been doing some pretty heavy work with 'em lately. The $29 HF Central Machinery 6" bench grinder is useless. It has so little starting torque it won't turn a wire wheel. I can spin the thing with my finger but the motor can't pull it at all. Also the motor diameter is as large as the wheel so it's in the way of everything I try to grind. |
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#36 (permalink) |
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Veteran Member
Join Date: Aug 2005
Location: Ontario, Canada
Posts: 1,386
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Let me throw out another silly question so that when one comes on sale I can pick it up...
I see 6" and 8" bench grinders advertised. I was guessing that I would just go with an 8. 6" is a bit cheaper. Any reason I should go with one and not the other?
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Kubota L3400HST+Horst toothbar, 4 Spool Prince valve, CCM TnT, Woods BB60 rotary cutter, Kodiak 7' rake, Walco Meteor 68" snowblower, Walco 7' cultivator, Horst 3pt bale spear, Maybridge 8'8" chain harrow, Woods HB72 box balde |
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#37 (permalink) | |
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Platinum Member
Join Date: Aug 2006
Location: Front Range of Colorado
Posts: 775
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Quote:
When I was in high school auto shop class, one of the druggie idiot students used the shop's bench grinder to trim his fingernails. I just shook my head when I was watching him do this. He never got hurt, so I guess in his case the old saying about God protecting fools and drunks applied.
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Measure it with a micrometer, mark it with chalk, cut it with a torch, beat to fit, paint to match, inspect it with a microscope. Added second camera to Lights, Camera, ACTION! gallery. 06/11/2008 http://picasaweb.google.com/mjncad/L...52432616649538 Added "Thumper needs new teeth" to John Deere L130 gallery. 06/11/2008 http://picasaweb.google.com/mjncad/J...50463890430370 http://picasaweb.google.com/mjncad |
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#38 (permalink) | |
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Platinum Member
Join Date: Aug 2006
Location: Front Range of Colorado
Posts: 775
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Quote:
I like the larger wheels as their motors have more torque, and they put less of a curve on the surface you are grinding.
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Measure it with a micrometer, mark it with chalk, cut it with a torch, beat to fit, paint to match, inspect it with a microscope. Added second camera to Lights, Camera, ACTION! gallery. 06/11/2008 http://picasaweb.google.com/mjncad/L...52432616649538 Added "Thumper needs new teeth" to John Deere L130 gallery. 06/11/2008 http://picasaweb.google.com/mjncad/J...50463890430370 http://picasaweb.google.com/mjncad |
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#39 (permalink) |
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Platinum Member
Join Date: Jul 2006
Location: Meridian Idaho
Posts: 551
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I like the 8"... I have a craftsman, they put stuff on sale/have specials around Christmas time so thatē“ when I picked mine up.
Oh yeah.... _always_ wear gloves with the angle grinder... those things just love skin. I also prefer a faceshield to glasses, especially when using a wire brush/wheel. |
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#40 (permalink) | |
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Platinum Member
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Quote:
Yea!! I hate picking out those wires that have embedded like needles. It is bad enough in the Levis, but in the face that would be painful. The only thing worse is a die grinder and a carbide cutter--those really make small little darts!! Mike
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"In all your ways acknowledge Him and He will direct your paths" Solomon YM1510D, YM 1202 tiller, KK copy dirt scoop, imitation Gannon rollover box blade, and a Rear Blade with gauge wheels |
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