Woodturning (rec.crafts.woodturning) To discuss tools, techniques, styles, materials, shows and competitions, education and educational materials related to woodturning. All skill levels are welcome, from art turners to production turners, beginners to masters.

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Default Grinder Modification


I had (inadvertently) bought a General 8 ³ 1725 rpm grinder which I now have
found out was built for 3/4 inch wheels. Bought the grinder at a woodturning
show and they sold me 1 inch wheels to go with it. Itıs too late to try send
it back. Has anyone modified such or a similar grinder to handle the thicker
1 inch wheels?

Bob


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On Mar 26, 4:20 pm, Robert Drebit wrote:
I had (inadvertently) bought a General 8 ³ 1725 rpm grinder which I now have
found out was built for 3/4 inch wheels. Bought the grinder at a woodturning
show and they sold me 1 inch wheels to go with it. Itıs too late to try send
it back. Has anyone modified such or a similar grinder to handle the thicker
1 inch wheels?

Bob


Are you sure the wheels won't fit? If it is one of the General
International branded products, it is actually a generic Taiwanese
grinder, branded under many different badges.

I have two 8" grinders. Either size wheel will fit either grinder,
the only difference is the covers/guards on the wheels. If the motor
arbor is long enough and you can get the guard back on, you are in
business.

I would be more worried that the arbor hole size on the wheel was the
correct diameter to fit.

Robert

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Hi Bob

If the grinder is build for a 3/4" thick wheel, I would expect it to
be underpowered for a 1" thick wheel.

Could it be modified ?, yes. you could take the grindershaft with
armature to a machine shop and have them increase the length of the
thread by 1/2".

You then can widen the safety cages around the wheels and you're done

Or you could exchange the grinder and/or wheels to what you really
want or need, yes sometimes we do have to pay for our lessons.

Have fun and take care
Leo Van Der Loo


On Mar 26, 6:20 pm, Robert Drebit wrote:
I had (inadvertently) bought a General 8 ³ 1725 rpm grinder which I now have
found out was built for 3/4 inch wheels. Bought the grinder at a woodturning
show and they sold me 1 inch wheels to go with it. Itıs too late to try send
it back. Has anyone modified such or a similar grinder to handle the thicker
1 inch wheels?

Bob



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I can get the guards back on, but the nut on the arbor is only half on.

Bob



Bob - if you can't get the nut anymore than 1/2 on, quit there. Go no
further. That machine is made for 3/4 wheels and that is that. As
benign as grinders are, they can be extremely dangerous and there is
no reason to tempt fate. Just think of that 6-7 pound wheel working
its way off the arbor (not likely, but...) and flying off at 1750
rpms. And although there are a lot of daredevils out there, I
wouldn't put a cutting or grinding device on any tool that is larger
than it was designed to use.


On Mar 26, 9:45 pm, " wrote:


Or you could exchange the grinder and/or wheels to what you really want or need, yes sometimes we do have to pay for our lessons.

Have fun and take care
Leo Van Der Loo


I think Leo's point in what you COULD do was meant to be just that.
You "could" do it if you felt really comfortable doing that, and could
get a good job done.

I couldn't agree more with the second part, though and that is paying
for our "lessons". I personally think it is time to suck this one
up. If you got some really nice high quality and expensive wheels
from them for the grinder, keep the wheels and sell the grinder.

If the wheels are mid range type, sell them on Ebay and get some good
ones for your new grinder.

If you sell the whole thing and you are looking for a good grinder
with good wheels, you can get this one at a reasonable price and it
has good wheels on it. Not $100 each Nortons or $300 diamond wheels,
but good serviceable wheels.

http://www.woodcraft.com/family.aspx?familyid=4605

I think 3/4 of the people I know that turn have this grinder or one of
its cousins. The advantage of buying it from Woodcraft are the
wheels.

Robert




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Default Grinder Modification

Grinder ModificationThinner washers?


"Robert Drebit" wrote in message
...

I had (inadvertently) bought a General 8 " 1725 rpm grinder which I now have
found out was built for 3/4 inch wheels. Bought the grinder at a woodturning
show and they sold me 1 inch wheels to go with it. It's too late to try send
it back. Has anyone modified such or a similar grinder to handle the thicker
1 inch wheels?

Bob

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Default Grinder Modification

On Mar 26, 5:20 pm, Robert Drebit wrote:
I had (inadvertently) bought a General 8 ³ 1725 rpm grinder which I now have
found out was built for 3/4 inch wheels. Bought the grinder at a woodturning
show and they sold me 1 inch wheels to go with it. Itıs too late to try send
it back. Has anyone modified such or a similar grinder to handle the thicker
1 inch wheels?

Bob


You can get wheels that are recessed on one or both sides, so that you
can use a 1" or wider wheel on a shorter arbor. These are commonly
used on surface grinders. Likely to find an 8" wheel with a 1-1/4"
arbor hole, but you can bush that down. An 8" x 1" wheel might have a
recess 3" diameter by 1/2" deep. Try MSC or one of the other
metalworking suppliers.

John Martin

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On Mar 26, 6:20 pm, Robert Drebit wrote:
I had (inadvertently) bought a General 8 ³ 1725 rpm grinder which I now have
found out was built for 3/4 inch wheels. Bought the grinder at a woodturning
show and they sold me 1 inch wheels to go with it. Itıs too late to try send
it back. Has anyone modified such or a similar grinder to handle the thicker
1 inch wheels?

Bob


Yup. Fender washers. Thinner. Works great.

For wheels with a reduced recessed centre, try www.busybeetools.com. I
purchased a 1" 120 grit white wheel there that has a 3/4" centre. They
ship anywhere.

Mike
www.toymakersite.com


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