DIYbanter

DIYbanter (https://www.diybanter.com/)
-   Metalworking (https://www.diybanter.com/metalworking/)
-   -   finishing aluminum (https://www.diybanter.com/metalworking/328616-finishing-aluminum.html)

doc[_4_] September 16th 11 02:41 PM

finishing aluminum
 
Any suggestions for finishing an aluminum bracket?
(bout 3" sq.)

No critical dimensions or anything.

Just want to get rid of witness marks and shine up the piece
so it doesn't look too rough.

I'm thinking something like flap wheels or some of that
3M stuff.

Tanks,
DOC




Spehro Pefhany September 16th 11 03:02 PM

finishing aluminum
 
On Fri, 16 Sep 2011 06:41:34 -0700 (PDT), doc
wrote:

Any suggestions for finishing an aluminum bracket?
(bout 3" sq.)

No critical dimensions or anything.

Just want to get rid of witness marks and shine up the piece
so it doesn't look too rough.

I'm thinking something like flap wheels or some of that
3M stuff.

Tanks,
DOC


Bead blast?


Jim Stewart September 16th 11 06:07 PM

finishing aluminum
 
doc wrote:
Any suggestions for finishing an aluminum bracket?
(bout 3" sq.)

No critical dimensions or anything.

Just want to get rid of witness marks and shine up the piece
so it doesn't look too rough.

I'm thinking something like flap wheels or some of that
3M stuff.


Fastest would be to grain it with about 200
grit sandpaper in one direction. Making very
light scribe marks helps alot.




Ed Huntress September 16th 11 06:13 PM

finishing aluminum
 

"Jim Stewart" wrote in message
...
doc wrote:
Any suggestions for finishing an aluminum bracket?
(bout 3" sq.)

No critical dimensions or anything.

Just want to get rid of witness marks and shine up the piece
so it doesn't look too rough.

I'm thinking something like flap wheels or some of that
3M stuff.


Fastest would be to grain it with about 200
grit sandpaper in one direction. Making very
light scribe marks helps alot.


Agreed. With aluminum, you usually can do it by hand as fast as you can by
machine, if it's not too large. Graining will cover marks a lot better and
faster than blasting or other random abrasion. And it looks pretty good.

--
Ed Huntress



PrecisionmachinisT September 16th 11 06:31 PM

finishing aluminum
 

"Ed Huntress" wrote in message
...

"Jim Stewart" wrote in message
...
doc wrote:
Any suggestions for finishing an aluminum bracket?
(bout 3" sq.)

No critical dimensions or anything.

Just want to get rid of witness marks and shine up the piece
so it doesn't look too rough.

I'm thinking something like flap wheels or some of that
3M stuff.


Fastest would be to grain it with about 200
grit sandpaper in one direction. Making very
light scribe marks helps alot.


Agreed. With aluminum, you usually can do it by hand as fast as you can by
machine, if it's not too large. Graining will cover marks a lot better and
faster than blasting or other random abrasion. And it looks pretty good.



For larger areas of flat work I usually will go with matte instead, by using
a random or figure 8 motion pattern and a maroon scotch brite pad.



Ed Huntress September 16th 11 06:39 PM

finishing aluminum
 

"PrecisionmachinisT" wrote in message
news:bZednZx5MI1GGu7TnZ2dnUVZ_vSdnZ2d@scnresearch. com...

"Ed Huntress" wrote in message
...

"Jim Stewart" wrote in message
...
doc wrote:
Any suggestions for finishing an aluminum bracket?
(bout 3" sq.)

No critical dimensions or anything.

Just want to get rid of witness marks and shine up the piece
so it doesn't look too rough.

I'm thinking something like flap wheels or some of that
3M stuff.

Fastest would be to grain it with about 200
grit sandpaper in one direction. Making very
light scribe marks helps alot.


Agreed. With aluminum, you usually can do it by hand as fast as you can
by machine, if it's not too large. Graining will cover marks a lot better
and faster than blasting or other random abrasion. And it looks pretty
good.



For larger areas of flat work I usually will go with matte instead, by
using a random or figure 8 motion pattern and a maroon scotch brite pad.


Yeah, on a large area it can be difficult to make graining come out even.
But it's easy on small ones.

--
Ed Huntress



Tom Gardner[_6_] September 17th 11 02:00 AM

finishing aluminum
 
On 9/16/2011 9:41 AM, doc wrote:
Any suggestions for finishing an aluminum bracket?
(bout 3" sq.)

No critical dimensions or anything.

Just want to get rid of witness marks and shine up the piece
so it doesn't look too rough.

I'm thinking something like flap wheels or some of that
3M stuff.

Tanks,
DOC




Wire Brush!

Rich Grise[_3_] September 17th 11 11:43 PM

finishing aluminum
 
Jim Stewart wrote:
doc wrote:
Any suggestions for finishing an aluminum bracket?
(bout 3" sq.)

No critical dimensions or anything.

Just want to get rid of witness marks and shine up the piece
so it doesn't look too rough.

I'm thinking something like flap wheels or some of that
3M stuff.


Fastest would be to grain it with about 200
grit sandpaper in one direction. Making very
light scribe marks helps alot.


I've seen mirror-smooth aluminum, but I have no idea how they
achieved it - maybe lapping?

Good Luck!
Rich


Jim Stewart September 19th 11 06:52 PM

finishing aluminum
 
Rich Grise wrote:
Jim Stewart wrote:
doc wrote:
Any suggestions for finishing an aluminum bracket?
(bout 3" sq.)

No critical dimensions or anything.

Just want to get rid of witness marks and shine up the piece
so it doesn't look too rough.

I'm thinking something like flap wheels or some of that
3M stuff.


Fastest would be to grain it with about 200
grit sandpaper in one direction. Making very
light scribe marks helps alot.


I've seen mirror-smooth aluminum, but I have no idea how they
achieved it - maybe lapping?


I've gotten near-mirror finishes by sanding with
progressively finer grits of sandpaper, ending
with 800 or so and then buffing with a canvas
wheel and polishing rouge. Ryobi sells the wheels
and rouge at Home Despot.




Rich Grise[_3_] September 20th 11 12:13 AM

finishing aluminum
 
Jim Stewart wrote:
Rich Grise wrote:

I've seen mirror-smooth aluminum, but I have no idea how they
achieved it - maybe lapping?


I've gotten near-mirror finishes by sanding with
progressively finer grits of sandpaper, ending
with 800 or so and then buffing with a canvas
wheel and polishing rouge. Ryobi sells the wheels
and rouge at Home Despot.


Thanks!
Rich



All times are GMT +1. The time now is 06:35 PM.

Powered by vBulletin® Copyright ©2000 - 2024, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.
Copyright ©2004 - 2014 DIYbanter