Woodworking (rec.woodworking) Discussion forum covering all aspects of working with wood. All levels of expertise are encouraged to particiapte.

Reply
 
LinkBack Thread Tools Search this Thread Display Modes
  #1   Report Post  
Posted to rec.woodworking
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 129
Default Drum Sander Grit?

Last Friday I purchased a 25" dual drum sander and was wondering you could
share with me how you use yours and what grit of paper you keep in stock. I
got the machine wired up and running last night and was running some test
pieces of rough pine through it, I had a 80 grit on the front and 120 on the
back. After several passes I still had small lines running the length of the
wood so I removed the paper from the front drum and did a few passes of 120,
there were still lines running the length. Is this normal? what grit would
someone use for finishing. I need to stain these pieces when finished? Also
do you guys keep a roll of every grit on hand or just three or four grits?
Would it be normal to go from 80 to 220 or should I make slower
progressions? What about using different grits on the front and rear drums?

THANKS


  #2   Report Post  
Posted to rec.woodworking
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 232
Default Drum Sander Grit?

On Tue, 21 Nov 2006 09:16:52 -0500, "HotRod"
wrote:

Last Friday I purchased a 25" dual drum sander and was wondering you could
share with me how you use yours and what grit of paper you keep in stock. I
got the machine wired up and running last night and was running some test
pieces of rough pine through it, I had a 80 grit on the front and 120 on the
back. After several passes I still had small lines running the length of the
wood so I removed the paper from the front drum and did a few passes of 120,
there were still lines running the length. Is this normal? what grit would
someone use for finishing. I need to stain these pieces when finished? Also
do you guys keep a roll of every grit on hand or just three or four grits?
Would it be normal to go from 80 to 220 or should I make slower
progressions? What about using different grits on the front and rear drums?



I bought 60 grit and found that it was too aggressive. Waste of money
for wood that just came out of a planer. 120 and 240 seem to be
about right for next to final sanding. The 240 still leave the sanding
lines and need to be either scraped or orbit/vibrate sanded out before
oiling/staining.

Pete
  #3   Report Post  
Posted to rec.woodworking
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 129
Default Drum Sander Grit?

is it customary to use a different grit on each drum?


wrote in message ...
On Tue, 21 Nov 2006 09:16:52 -0500, "HotRod"
wrote:

Last Friday I purchased a 25" dual drum sander and was wondering you could
share with me how you use yours and what grit of paper you keep in stock.
I
got the machine wired up and running last night and was running some test
pieces of rough pine through it, I had a 80 grit on the front and 120 on
the
back. After several passes I still had small lines running the length of
the
wood so I removed the paper from the front drum and did a few passes of
120,
there were still lines running the length. Is this normal? what grit would
someone use for finishing. I need to stain these pieces when finished?
Also
do you guys keep a roll of every grit on hand or just three or four grits?
Would it be normal to go from 80 to 220 or should I make slower
progressions? What about using different grits on the front and rear
drums?



I bought 60 grit and found that it was too aggressive. Waste of money
for wood that just came out of a planer. 120 and 240 seem to be
about right for next to final sanding. The 240 still leave the sanding
lines and need to be either scraped or orbit/vibrate sanded out before
oiling/staining.

Pete



  #4   Report Post  
Posted to rec.woodworking
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 833
Default Drum Sander Grit?

HotRod wrote:
is it customary to use a different grit on each drum?


That's why there are two drums.

--

dadiOH
____________________________

dadiOH's dandies v3.06...
....a help file of info about MP3s, recording from
LP/cassette and tips & tricks on this and that.
Get it at http://mysite.verizon.net/xico



  #5   Report Post  
Posted to rec.woodworking
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 2,091
Default Drum Sander Grit?

I think Pine is not the best for testing but I like to go with the
finest grit I can. I think that drum sander grit needs to be thought
about differently than hand sanding.

I think I would try 120-180 or 120-150 and see if I can get some Oak to
pass through and come out flat but not stall with a fairly aggressive
cut and a few passes. One trick I always use is to pass the stock
through one more time when I am done without rasining the table so I
sand it twice on the final seeting. This seems to do a nice lite final
pass and minimize the sand lines.

Even if I had 180 working I always start hand sanding at 150 after
coming out of the drum or wide belt. The thing is, just a quick pass
with some good 150 on a palm sander and it's smoothe enough for
assembly.

P.S. Someone mentioned an orbital but I shy away from them except for
flattening joints on badly jointed face frames or really rough spots.
I've had to live with the little circular squiggles in my finish when I
didn't notice it soon enough so now I just use palm sanders once the
wood has been through the wide belt.


HotRod wrote:
Last Friday I purchased a 25" dual drum sander and was wondering you could
share with me how you use yours and what grit of paper you keep in stock. I
got the machine wired up and running last night and was running some test
pieces of rough pine through it, I had a 80 grit on the front and 120 on the
back. After several passes I still had small lines running the length of the
wood so I removed the paper from the front drum and did a few passes of 120,
there were still lines running the length. Is this normal? what grit would
someone use for finishing. I need to stain these pieces when finished? Also
do you guys keep a roll of every grit on hand or just three or four grits?
Would it be normal to go from 80 to 220 or should I make slower
progressions? What about using different grits on the front and rear drums?

THANKS




  #6   Report Post  
Posted to rec.woodworking
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 129
Default Drum Sander Grit?

I'll give it a shot and see how I make out. Since I'm new to the drum sander
this may take some time. How hard or tight are you pressing down on the wood
with your initial passes? Are you actually running it just below where the
motot would slow down or die? Also on my machine each roller has a small
metal roller in front and behind it, how should these be set?




"SonomaProducts.com" wrote in message
ups.com...
I think Pine is not the best for testing but I like to go with the
finest grit I can. I think that drum sander grit needs to be thought
about differently than hand sanding.

I think I would try 120-180 or 120-150 and see if I can get some Oak to
pass through and come out flat but not stall with a fairly aggressive
cut and a few passes. One trick I always use is to pass the stock
through one more time when I am done without rasining the table so I
sand it twice on the final seeting. This seems to do a nice lite final
pass and minimize the sand lines.

Even if I had 180 working I always start hand sanding at 150 after
coming out of the drum or wide belt. The thing is, just a quick pass
with some good 150 on a palm sander and it's smoothe enough for
assembly.

P.S. Someone mentioned an orbital but I shy away from them except for
flattening joints on badly jointed face frames or really rough spots.
I've had to live with the little circular squiggles in my finish when I
didn't notice it soon enough so now I just use palm sanders once the
wood has been through the wide belt.


HotRod wrote:
Last Friday I purchased a 25" dual drum sander and was wondering you
could
share with me how you use yours and what grit of paper you keep in stock.
I
got the machine wired up and running last night and was running some test
pieces of rough pine through it, I had a 80 grit on the front and 120 on
the
back. After several passes I still had small lines running the length of
the
wood so I removed the paper from the front drum and did a few passes of
120,
there were still lines running the length. Is this normal? what grit
would
someone use for finishing. I need to stain these pieces when finished?
Also
do you guys keep a roll of every grit on hand or just three or four
grits?
Would it be normal to go from 80 to 220 or should I make slower
progressions? What about using different grits on the front and rear
drums?

THANKS




  #7   Report Post  
Posted to rec.woodworking
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 1,617
Default Drum Sander Grit?


"HotRod" wrote in message
...
Last Friday I purchased a 25" dual drum sander and was wondering you could
share with me how you use yours and what grit of paper you keep in stock.


It depends on how much wood you are putting through it at a grade.

I normally just do 80 on the drum and the rest with a ROS, but if I were to
do enough to justify the setups, I would go finer.


  #8   Report Post  
Posted to rec.woodworking
bf bf is offline
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 274
Default Drum Sander Grit?


I start with 60 and then go to 80, and then 120..
This is with oak. Although after reading the posts here, I may start
skipping 60 and just using 80 and 120.

I'm largely doing face frames and cabinent doors though with a satin
poly finish. To me, the lines aren't noticable or worth worrying about.
If I was doing more "fine furniture" work, I might try to do finer
grits.



HotRod wrote:
Last Friday I purchased a 25" dual drum sander and was wondering you could
share with me how you use yours and what grit of paper you keep in stock. I
got the machine wired up and running last night and was running some test
pieces of rough pine through it, I had a 80 grit on the front and 120 on the
back. After several passes I still had small lines running the length of the
wood so I removed the paper from the front drum and did a few passes of 120,
there were still lines running the length. Is this normal? what grit would
someone use for finishing. I need to stain these pieces when finished? Also
do you guys keep a roll of every grit on hand or just three or four grits?
Would it be normal to go from 80 to 220 or should I make slower
progressions? What about using different grits on the front and rear drums?

THANKS


  #9   Report Post  
Posted to rec.woodworking
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 2,091
Default Drum Sander Grit?

The manual should give you some clue about the tension on the feed
rollers. They are likely spring loaded and need to grab enough to feed
without ever slipping while the drums are rolling.

I try to stay far from grinding the drums to a halt. It takes several
passes to remove the compression lines from a stall. On most machines I
just play with the depth bringng it up until I hear a slight engagement
then let it roll. Then learn what a good increment is each pass. One
the wide belt I am using now I bump it up .3mm per pass. and .2 or .1
if I am trying to do a fine pass.


HotRod wrote:
I'll give it a shot and see how I make out. Since I'm new to the drum sander
this may take some time. How hard or tight are you pressing down on the wood
with your initial passes? Are you actually running it just below where the
motot would slow down or die? Also on my machine each roller has a small
metal roller in front and behind it, how should these be set?




"SonomaProducts.com" wrote in message
ups.com...
I think Pine is not the best for testing but I like to go with the
finest grit I can. I think that drum sander grit needs to be thought
about differently than hand sanding.

I think I would try 120-180 or 120-150 and see if I can get some Oak to
pass through and come out flat but not stall with a fairly aggressive
cut and a few passes. One trick I always use is to pass the stock
through one more time when I am done without rasining the table so I
sand it twice on the final seeting. This seems to do a nice lite final
pass and minimize the sand lines.

Even if I had 180 working I always start hand sanding at 150 after
coming out of the drum or wide belt. The thing is, just a quick pass
with some good 150 on a palm sander and it's smoothe enough for
assembly.

P.S. Someone mentioned an orbital but I shy away from them except for
flattening joints on badly jointed face frames or really rough spots.
I've had to live with the little circular squiggles in my finish when I
didn't notice it soon enough so now I just use palm sanders once the
wood has been through the wide belt.


HotRod wrote:
Last Friday I purchased a 25" dual drum sander and was wondering you
could
share with me how you use yours and what grit of paper you keep in stock.
I
got the machine wired up and running last night and was running some test
pieces of rough pine through it, I had a 80 grit on the front and 120 on
the
back. After several passes I still had small lines running the length of
the
wood so I removed the paper from the front drum and did a few passes of
120,
there were still lines running the length. Is this normal? what grit
would
someone use for finishing. I need to stain these pieces when finished?
Also
do you guys keep a roll of every grit on hand or just three or four
grits?
Would it be normal to go from 80 to 220 or should I make slower
progressions? What about using different grits on the front and rear
drums?

THANKS



  #10   Report Post  
Posted to rec.woodworking
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 129
Default Drum Sander Grit?

I'm actually getting a little "Sniping" near the end of the baords and was
wondering if this is normal? How can I prevent this?


"HotRod" wrote in message
...
Last Friday I purchased a 25" dual drum sander and was wondering you could
share with me how you use yours and what grit of paper you keep in stock.
I got the machine wired up and running last night and was running some
test pieces of rough pine through it, I had a 80 grit on the front and 120
on the back. After several passes I still had small lines running the
length of the wood so I removed the paper from the front drum and did a
few passes of 120, there were still lines running the length. Is this
normal? what grit would someone use for finishing. I need to stain these
pieces when finished? Also do you guys keep a roll of every grit on hand
or just three or four grits? Would it be normal to go from 80 to 220 or
should I make slower progressions? What about using different grits on the
front and rear drums?

THANKS





  #11   Report Post  
Posted to rec.woodworking
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 2,091
Default Drum Sander Grit?

This could be related to the setup on the feed rollers. Generally the
infeed and out feed tables should skew slightly up from the base. I've
never seen leading edge snipe from a sander but tailing edge is totally
possible if a long piece starts to sage on the outfeed and lever
pressure upward on the tailing end. On long pieces I usually stand at
the outfeed and hold them up slightly to avoid this.

Sanders shouldn't have much snipe if any so you might want to see if
they have any specifc setup info for the infeed\outfeed roller
pressure.
BTW, what brand?

BW

HotRod wrote:
I'm actually getting a little "Sniping" near the end of the baords and was
wondering if this is normal? How can I prevent this?


"HotRod" wrote in message
...
Last Friday I purchased a 25" dual drum sander and was wondering you could
share with me how you use yours and what grit of paper you keep in stock.
I got the machine wired up and running last night and was running some
test pieces of rough pine through it, I had a 80 grit on the front and 120
on the back. After several passes I still had small lines running the
length of the wood so I removed the paper from the front drum and did a
few passes of 120, there were still lines running the length. Is this
normal? what grit would someone use for finishing. I need to stain these
pieces when finished? Also do you guys keep a roll of every grit on hand
or just three or four grits? Would it be normal to go from 80 to 220 or
should I make slower progressions? What about using different grits on the
front and rear drums?

THANKS


  #12   Report Post  
Posted to rec.woodworking
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 129
Default Drum Sander Grit?

Thanks I'll need to experement with that.


Reply
Thread Tools Search this Thread
Search this Thread:

Advanced Search
Display Modes

Posting Rules

Smilies are On
[IMG] code is On
HTML code is Off
Trackbacks are On
Pingbacks are On
Refbacks are On


Similar Threads
Thread Thread Starter Forum Replies Last Post
Drum Sander ? HotRod Woodworking 3 October 24th 06 05:46 PM
Sanding floorboards - Drum Sander and or Edge Sander John UK diy 10 September 2nd 05 06:43 AM
Sanding floorboards - Drum Sander and or Edge Sander John UK diy 1 September 1st 05 07:08 PM
Making a drum sander, problem truing the drum Larry Bud Woodworking 13 February 3rd 05 04:41 PM
Shop Built Wide belt sander vs Shop Built Drum sander....Whats easyer to make. Im no engineer. mememme Woodworking 0 August 25th 03 03:01 PM


All times are GMT +1. The time now is 06:08 AM.

Powered by vBulletin® Copyright ©2000 - 2024, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.
Copyright ©2004-2024 DIYbanter.
The comments are property of their posters.
 

About Us

"It's about DIY & home improvement"