Gouged finish blade: Grind down or replace?

   / Gouged finish blade: Grind down or replace?
  • Thread Starter
#11  
Do compare it to the "good" blades though to be sure you havn't bent the blade

Thanks, I did just that and its fine and not bent.
 
   / Gouged finish blade: Grind down or replace? #12  
The blade only has to be reasonably sharp. Straight is a bonus, but sharpen the gouge and have at it.

They come from the factory straight because it is easier to make them straight than any other shape.
 
   / Gouged finish blade: Grind down or replace? #13  
The blade only has to be reasonably sharp. Straight is a bonus, but sharpen the gouge and have at it.

They come from the factory straight because it is easier to make them straight than any other shape.

I think my blades are serrated from so many chips, but they still work fine.:laughing:
 
   / Gouged finish blade: Grind down or replace? #14  
The blade only has to be reasonably sharp. Straight is a bonus, but sharpen the gouge and have at it.

They come from the factory straight because it is easier to make them straight than any other shape.

Ha, How true, Plus you would be surprised to find out they are different hardness ratings too.I still have good luck with aftermarket blades..
 
   / Gouged finish blade: Grind down or replace? #15  
I wouldn't bother trying to grind away the blade until the
gouge is gone. Just sharpen around it, leave the ding, make
sure the blade is reasonably well balanced, and mow away.:thumbsup:

Bill
 
   / Gouged finish blade: Grind down or replace? #16  
When wood chipper blades are taken in the sharpening place does not grind out all of the imperfections. You'd lose too much material.

Here is a suggestion that should get the safety police howling: I fill in the gap with weld and grind it back to the original. The tips get a bit of "soft" hard facing that can be worked (ground). It helps keep the shape longer.

We have very rocky soil here and the cost of replacement blades is prohibitive.
 
   / Gouged finish blade: Grind down or replace? #17  
I would just run over it with a file and go.

I get my blades for a whopping $13 a piece. So, I replace my blades about June 1st every year and go. File down as needed.

Dull blades will turn green grass brown, especially if your grass is turf tough and thick.
 
   / Gouged finish blade: Grind down or replace? #18  
Good deal getting the impact wrench, don't know how I got along without them.

I would touch up the blade reinstall and mow.


I would touch up the blade, balance and then reinstall...
This is a mower, not a bush hog, right?
David from jax
 
   / Gouged finish blade: Grind down or replace? #19  
I live along a gravel township road and every winter when they run the snow plow I end op with a lot of gravel throen up in the yard. the small stuff isn't a problem but the occasional riverbiscuit hiding in the grass leaves my blades pretty dinged up. I usually wait until the second or third mowing in the spring before sharpening and just make sure the serrations are sharp too. At $70 a set I can't afford to replace blades 3 or 4 times yearly. I try to keep an extra set on hand already sharpened and ready to just swap out when some chucklehead tosses out a beer bottle or can out that I hit before I see it. Bottles sure will but a ding in a blade.
 
 

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