4.5 grinder recommendation?

   / 4.5 grinder recommendation? #91  
I was getting the paint off a brick wall. It was an all day affair. I started with a HF grinder. After about 2 1/2 hours my hands were vibrating so bad after turning the HF grinder off I threw it in the trash. I bought a Makita 4 inch down the street at my local ACE. It was so much better I finished the wall.

Last year at a welding class most of the young kids were using Dewalt grinders at class.

young kids today have about as much sense as a dead dog does. Besides, they don't care what they use because mommy and daddy bought it so might as well buy expensive yellow made in China that a less expensive tool No pay for equals a don't care attitude.

I'd say it was more about an out of balance attachment than the tool itself but I am amazed the HF 4.5 last 2.5 hours, the cheap ones, I can find the smoke in pretty quick.

I just bought the Chief air operated 4.5 angle grinder (IR clone) for 89 bucks. The IR one is 230 bucks at MSC every day. Looks identical except for the name on it. Same feel, same air consumption, same power, same throttle. Nice tool but then I prefer air of corded or cordless anything. Gonna get the Chief 1/2" air drill next.
 
   / 4.5 grinder recommendation? #92  
that was the fault of the HF wheels, not the grinder.. also, a pressure washer was the thing to use for getting paint off brick walls.. nearly every tool you can think of is made in China, or a similar Asian Country, and re-branded according to the wish of the reseller.. Makita: "Makita Corporation (TYO: 6586) is a Japanese manufacturer of power tools. Founded on March 21, 1915, it is based in Anjō, Japan, and operates factories in Brazil, China, Japan, Mexico, Romania, the United Kingdom, Germany, Dubai, Thailand and the United States. Annual sales were equivalent to $2.9 billion in 2012." so the quality of the tool depends on the Country the tool was manufactured in!!..

... and there is no practical way of telling exactly where it was made unless you take it apart. I just assume (maybe wrongly) that it was made in China. That way, my expectations are never too high. I don't believe any retail outlet would be happy about you taking a new tool apart to look inside to discover where it was made it....:D
 
   / 4.5 grinder recommendation? #93  
I have used several brands, in serious settings. Milwaukee, Metabo, Hitatchi, HF orange, HF red, Makita, DeWalt, Lowe's, Skil etc. I've picked up a bosch to use, but never put much time on it. But Bosch is the owner of skil.

My thoughts:
1) Milwaukee. Good Product. Not without faults. Get highest amperage you can find. But idiots exist and as my father said "Some people can tear up a steel ball in a sand bed."
2) Metabo. Good product, but not what people say it is. Get the clutched model. But once you get in a regular habit of slipping them, they slip easier and easier.
3) Hitatchi. Good product for the price. Buy 4 and keep a different wheel on each one, and put the 4th one up.
4) HF orange. Save the brushes they send with one. But never had any issues with them except the fact they are low amp rated. Use accordingly and let the grinder do its job and they last. If not, watch the smoke. I miss those because they were good for certain tasks...but they've replaced most of them now with the red product I think.
5) HF Red product. Nope.
6)Makita. Works well while they last. Never had great luck, but some people swear by them. I burned up mine quickly when used under comparable conditions to similar amped models.
5) DeWalt. My favorite. If anything, you can see it with the bright yellow. But I don't buy less than the 10 amp. They have a 13 amp model...which I like. But I was on a job installing burglar bars on a restaurant. Had a new HF and just happened to be fairly new DeWalt on the tailgate of my truck connected to my engine drive. Walked into the restaurant to check out some installation issues. Came back out 15 minutes later and the orange HF walked off, and the Dewalt was still there. Go figure. Also they have newer designs with a special vent that keeps the sparks from getting into the motor works on some of them. Easy to use and adjust spark guard.
6) Lowe's. I think my brand at the time was GMC? Good product, variable speed, but it had its limits. Never burned up or smoked it, but did wear out the brushes. Need to fix it. It was great as a cup brusher.
7) Skil. Run and hide. It's not the grinding disk throwing out smoke.
8) B and D Orange Crap storm orange things. Lasts longer than skil...but don't hold your breath for more than home owner expectations, unless it starts smoking.
9) Bosch. OK...but I can't get away from the thoughts of a skil being from the same company blood.

But above all considerations, look for this:
1) Amp rating. It's the great equalizer and only way to truly compare. That will tell you expected duty and life span of the unit. 7 amps is not great, but tolerable for light stuff. 10 amps minimum for pro use. 13 amps are better, especially for a 4.5"
2) Extra Brushes. They all wear out.
3) multiple possible handle attachment points. 3 is good. 2 ok. 1...pass on it.
5) Easy to disassemble screws and brush openings. If its sealed up looking pass on it. No screws? Run.
6) Easy to access and operate Disk lock pin.
7) Easy to remove disk. I like the Dewalt hand remove, toolless design. Not all of them have it though.

Well, we all know where your stuff comes from and how it gets here (container). No mystery there. Is the insulation between windings rice paper as well? Hope you are sanatizing everything. I hear the Wuhan Flue can be spread from touching contaminated surfaces....lol
 
   / 4.5 grinder recommendation? #94  
that was the fault of the HF wheels, not the grinder.. also, a pressure washer was the thing to use for getting paint off brick walls.. nearly every tool you can think of is made in China, or a similar Asian Country, and re-branded according to the wish of the reseller.. Makita: "Makita Corporation (TYO: 6586) is a Japanese manufacturer of power tools. Founded on March 21, 1915, it is based in Anjō, Japan, and operates factories in Brazil, China, Japan, Mexico, Romania, the United Kingdom, Germany, Dubai, Thailand and the United States. Annual sales were equivalent to $2.9 billion in 2012." so the quality of the tool depends on the Country the tool was manufactured in!!..

No, a pressure washer would not have worked for my wall. The paint was on too hard. The color was wrong and my wife wanted it natural brick. I have I think, 13 hp pressure washer with a CAT compressor. It is a big Porter Cable pressure washer.

I don't know where the Makita was made but it sure is a lot better grinder for $25 more.
 
   / 4.5 grinder recommendation? #95  
It's less about where it's made, and more about the quality/design specs from the mfr. I prefer Dewalt and Bosch upper end tools because they last for me. But I know they both make low end junk too, so I don't like to say which brand is best.
 
   / 4.5 grinder recommendation? #96  
It's less about where it's made, and more about the quality/design specs from the mfr. I prefer Dewalt and Bosch upper end tools because they last for me. But I know they both make low end junk too, so I don't like to say which brand is best.

^^^Agreed^^^
 
   / 4.5 grinder recommendation? #97  
Well, we all know where your stuff comes from and how it gets here (container). No mystery there. Is the insulation between windings rice paper as well? Hope you are sanatizing everything. I hear the Wuhan Flue can be spread from touching contaminated surfaces....lol
I confess I am not sure about the intent of your post...so I'll comment as best as I can.
Miller and Lincoln get stuff in by container as well...no mystery there either, except to those with their heads buried in the sand or elsewhere. They don't air freight their product into the US.

Our transformer cores, many of them any way, are from the US. And no we use no rice paper. ETL wouldn't allow it.

As far as the flu, our factory isn't in the area greatest affected, and no new cases have been reported. Our factory is at work, although a a reduced compliment But on hard surfaces, the flu doesn't survive that long, and shipping takes 2 weeks+ to get here on average...sometimes a bit longer, depending upon port of calls.
 
   / 4.5 grinder recommendation? #98  
I was getting the paint off a brick wall. It was an all day affair. I started with a HF grinder. After about 2 1/2 hours my hands were vibrating so bad after turning the HF grinder off I threw it in the trash. I bought a Makita 4 inch down the street at my local ACE. It was so much better I finished the wall.

Last year at a welding class most of the young kids were using Dewalt grinders at class.
I have Dewalt and several HF grinders. The Dewalt MAY have a bit more power but if you buy the larger amp rating paddle switch on, they are about equal except for the very stiff cords on the HF grinders. That really doesn't have anything to do with the longevity of them. I have been using my HF for over 10 years, even have one of the slide switch $10 ones and so far none have let out any smoke. I know enough about grinding that I dont bog them down. They cut faster if you keep the RPM up with medium pressure on them. Other than the sliding switch on the $10 one which I dont car for, it works just as well as any of them
Vibration is the attachment, not the grinder. Get a quality grinder disc and you will notice much less vibration. I have dropped all of them off my fab table at one time or another and other than breaking the grinding disc on them, not one has been damaged. Unless I am grinding the root pass on a buttweld, I prefer the sanding disc to a grinding wheel. They cut just as well or better, always have a fresh sharp grinding edge and the sparking isn't as much.
 
   / 4.5 grinder recommendation? #99  
I confess I am not sure about the intent of your post...so I'll comment as best as I can.
Miller and Lincoln get stuff in by container as well...no mystery there either, except to those with their heads buried in the sand or elsewhere. They don't air freight their product into the US.

Our transformer cores, many of them any way, are from the US. And no we use no rice paper. ETL wouldn't allow it.

As far as the flu, our factory isn't in the area greatest affected, and no new cases have been reported. Our factory is at work, although a a reduced compliment But on hard surfaces, the flu doesn't survive that long, and shipping takes 2 weeks+ to get here on average...sometimes a bit longer, depending upon port of calls.

I like to poke you because you always assume a defensive posture. Far as survival of corona virus on hard surface, that is conjecture, much like all the conjecture surrounding the Wuhan Flu. You don't know that for sure except what you have been told by a government that is a dictatorship. I prefer to err on the side of safety myself, not that I would buy your imported product anyway.

Far as what is inside the box, I don't much care said before, Everlast to me is boxing trunks.:laughing:

Never much cared for your representation after the drubbing you gave Jim Colt for no reason and yes, I have 2 Hypertherms for the shop. I realize you pay for the right to advertise on here so I guess you can assume the 'position'. Whether I agree with your views or not is irrevalant.
 
   / 4.5 grinder recommendation? #100  
That's fine, but Jim Colt is no longer around for Hypertherm and I am. He admitted publicly he "trolled" through forums, looking for opportunity to inject free advertisement and talk down other players in the market, and Hypertherm has never sponsored any forums or anything that I can think of. Once he retired (according to what I was told), he no longer cares about forums like this. (when was the last time you saw him...he said he had a tractor). I've actually managed several multi-million dollar farms for a living, and grew up in the farm equipment business, and worked as a territory manager for the Tennessee Farmer's COOP outside of the state. I do care about more than just here, and when I see things I can help with outside of this forum, I have, and do.

He never shared or helped people outside of a narrow scope of things, and for a tractor forum, I never heard or saw much participation outside of here. And I have. And yes, I had reason because he attacked us many times on many different forums. We've carried on privately behind the scenes and I know what was said, so it wasn't without provocation.

As far as a defensive posture, I'm here because I want to be. I defend Everlast to be sure. But I'm guessing there have been hundreds, if not thousands of customers that have bought products here on this forum, as a result of our presence. I've tried to do a good job representing the brand and those customer's interests which put their trust in me.

Anytime someone like the above mentioned comes in and slants things against us that are not true, or out of date, or extremely biased from one point of view ( which Jim frequently did...and IS provocation) I do want to defend the brand.

If I leave stuff along, from people who state things out of ignorance and people who state things with malicious intent, it doesn't take long for people to assume that it is correct and that there is an issue, where things could not be further from the truth. I get calls all the time where people are all jacked up about something they read here or there, and was later repeated to be true somewhere else and they read it in both places thinking it is a problem or that something was true (whether capability, specification or whatever) that was not. Then they believe it is an official Everlast position or problem. And they begin to repeat it, or call me expecting me to explain.

So, yes, I do have to defend things, especially when they are wrong or misleading. Sorry if that rubs you the wrong way. When you have an innovative and different business model, where you market differently, and a competing brand comes in a tries to "drive by" you and make outright or veiled statements and then leave without any accountability or explanation until they decide to do it again, without any real skin in the game, I think that is wrong and that is why I have defended the product so strongly.

I can't count the endless number of times customers both prospective and current that actually voice that they agree with what I do and say in not only promotion, but defense of the brand.

As far as what the Chinese government told us, I am not going by that. I am going by information that I have read and researched independently and recently from the US. Maximum life is 9 days on the outside of things. Usually within 48 hours or less it is dead.

As far as that goes, we've sent over additional supplies to be used in decontamination and factory worker self protection against spreading the illness since self protection stuff is in heavy demand over there...and expect more will be sent as needed.

But back to grinders...
 
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