Threepoint
Veteran Member
- Joined
- Feb 13, 2014
- Messages
- 2,234
- Location
- No. VA
- Tractor
- Kubota B2150HST w/ LA350 loader, Kubota GF1800 HST, Kioti CK3510SE HST w/ KL4030 loader, Kioti NX4510HST/cab w/ KL6010 loader
Here's another little HF item that's handy to have in the shop: The "craft magnets", two for 79 cents with a coupon:
2 Pc Craft Magnet Blocks Quite strong, and have a much larger surface area than rare-earth button magnets. Here are some uses I've found:
- Stick one just below each wheel of a bench grinder to catch the iron dust and filings that otherwise end up in the air, your lungs, or on the floor when sharpening gouges, chisels, etc.
- When drilling in steel or iron, especially when away from the shop, stick one on the workpiece beside the drill bit to catch the swarf and millings. Lets you work much cleaner. Last week I needed to drill and tap a hole for a grounding screw to install some lighting on a tractor. The magnet caught virtually all the swarf and chips right at the source.
- Same idea when wire-feed welding with MIG or flux core. The magnets can catch spatter. Not that I ever get any, or course!
- In the shop, they're better than a shop vac for cleanup at the drill press, or after grinding, filing, or cutting on steel stock or a workpiece. Just hold one in your hand and bring it near the millings. Especially good if you've used cutting oil, which can be messy in the broom or shop vac. After you've collected the millings just wipe the magnet off with your fingers or paper towel at the trash can.
2 Pc Craft Magnet Blocks Quite strong, and have a much larger surface area than rare-earth button magnets. Here are some uses I've found:
- Stick one just below each wheel of a bench grinder to catch the iron dust and filings that otherwise end up in the air, your lungs, or on the floor when sharpening gouges, chisels, etc.
- When drilling in steel or iron, especially when away from the shop, stick one on the workpiece beside the drill bit to catch the swarf and millings. Lets you work much cleaner. Last week I needed to drill and tap a hole for a grounding screw to install some lighting on a tractor. The magnet caught virtually all the swarf and chips right at the source.
- Same idea when wire-feed welding with MIG or flux core. The magnets can catch spatter. Not that I ever get any, or course!
- In the shop, they're better than a shop vac for cleanup at the drill press, or after grinding, filing, or cutting on steel stock or a workpiece. Just hold one in your hand and bring it near the millings. Especially good if you've used cutting oil, which can be messy in the broom or shop vac. After you've collected the millings just wipe the magnet off with your fingers or paper towel at the trash can.