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I used the white aluminum oxide wheels for years, still do in the cabinet shop, BUT after watching Toms video it dawned on me, Im grinding HSS not carbon steel in the machine shop a bit of heat doesn't matter, someone gifted me some 7 inch Norton grey hard stones, I switched to them, work way better, easy to hold a sharp edge on the stone to thin the web on a drill, and easier to keep the face flat.
Free advice is worth exactly what you payed for it.
Greg
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I'm not trying to be rude but let's talk more in depth about tool grinding elsewhere and try to keep this to the item being created with the tools
I didn't get anything done last night unfortunately, work got in the way and we had a game night with some friends over. My fiancee leaves for a trip to Washington Friday morning so I will have ample time this weekend to play on the lathe in the garage.
SnailPowered, proud to be a member of MetalworkingFun since Aug 2012.
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The following 2 users Like TomG's post:
DaveH (03-02-2014), Highpower (03-02-2014)
(02-27-2014, 08:46 AM)SnailPowered Wrote: I'm not trying to be rude but let's talk more in depth about tool grinding elsewhere and try to keep this to the item being created with the tools
I didn't get anything done last night unfortunately, work got in the way and we had a game night with some friends over. My fiancee leaves for a trip to Washington Friday morning so I will have ample time this weekend to play on the lathe in the garage.
Good luck with that one. These threads often drift away from the original theme, but that's how everyone learns. You just have to drag it back on course every now and then.
I'll start a new thread on grinding wheel selection under General Metalworking Discussion.
Tom
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Snail....
I think your doing great, the best way to learn is to make mistakes.
could you please explain a little more on what this thing does in its working life..
Anthony.
ieezitin, proud to be a member of MetalworkingFun Forum since Jan 2013.
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It's used to shoot a 1"Dx3"L slug propelled by an electrically initiated .50 BMG cartridge through pretty much anything you can put in it's way. We use it to disarm tons of fuzes from hand grenades to 2,000 lb bombs. Of course, there are other options as well. Propelling water and steel shot or even just using the air pressure. The applications are basically limited by the user's creativity.
Mostly, it's just a REALLY old tool that is symbolic of our career field.
SnailPowered, proud to be a member of MetalworkingFun since Aug 2012.