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Denis Marier
 
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"Don't know a Canadian source?"

I do not know where you are in Canada. I buy my green grinding wheels at
an Industrial supplier (Apex) and I get a contractor's discount. Check the
Industrial suppliers in your area and compare prices. Canadian Tires are
not in the race when it comes to grinding wheels and grinders.
Having a good grinding wheel and a decent grinder is not all you need. You
have to dress the wheel on the grinder before you start to use it. To do
this a diamond dresser is the best but you can get away with the ordinary
steel wheel. Good Canadian and US made grinding wheels are expensive and
are preferred for mass production. However for the hobbyist the middle east
are exporting fair quality wheels at a lower price.
Check with Busy Bee Tools at www.busybeetools.com and your local King
Canada Tools.

From: "George" george@least
Newsgroups: rec.crafts.woodturning
Sent: Saturday, October 23, 2004 3:51 PM
Subject: Bench Grinder Choice?


You mean turning tools, right?


"George" george@least wrote in message
...
You mean turning tools, right?

Makes a ~3450 (High Speed) grinder possible, but I favor the greater

utility
of the slow speed, which is a less risky way of doing your wood chisels,
plane irons and such. If you have someone local with a return policy, you
have a pick of the litter possibility. If the one you have has problems,
back it goes under your arm for an exchange, instead of return
authorization, receive pig in poke....

Think carefully about the tradeoffs between soft bond and hard bond wheels
before you lay out as many bucks for a wheel as you did for the motor.

Soft
bonds are much less likely to burn, even on finer grits, which is what
you'll want for your turning tools, but they end up as sand on the floor
much more rapidly. My particular compromise is the 100 grit green SiC

type
http://woodworker.com/cgi-bin/FULLPR...ARTNUM=105-677 Don't know a
Canadian source.

Be sure and buy a conditioner - star wheel ok - when you get your grinder.
You'll want it to gain circularity at the outset, and for the occasional
level later.


"James D. Farrow" wrote in message
...
I want to get a bench grinder to sharpen my chisels. I noticed there are
quite a few choices with prices to match. As I will probably only use it

for
the chisels, do I really need a "great" one? Or will one of the cheaper

ones
do just as well for my needs?

Canadian Tire have a "Jobmate 6-in. 2.5A Bench Grinder" for $39.99.
Will this suffice?

Thanks,

James