Angle grinder

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Angle grinder 1543-2.jpg

What is it?

The angle grinder is a versatile cutting, grinding, polishing and sanding machine. It is traditionally used for cutting stone and metal, but has a multitude of other uses.

Typical applications include cutting bricks, paving slabs, and roof tiles. Cutting slots and chases in walls. Fast cutting through metal bar, sheet, angle etc, and fast grinding and fettling.

Types

An angle grinder is a good example of a tool that does a few jobs very well! Although there are wide range of makes and models to choose from, angle grinders basically come in two common forms: 115mm and 230mm, and there are some other intermediate sizes less commonly found. The smaller tool is lightweight and easy to use single-handed for some applications. The larger machine however, can be quite a handful and should always be used with two hands. The main limitation of the smaller size is limited depth of cut.

Safety

While not as obviously dangerous as say a circular saw, angle grinders still spin the cutting disc very quickly (typically over 11,000 rpm on the smaller machines) and the outside edge of the disc will be doing over 80 m/sec, that's nearly 180mph! Allowing a disc to touch any part of your body can result in a serious burn or cut.

In addition to ear defenders, gloves and eye protection are essential. Eye protection goggles should be of the "indirect" vented design. The more common direct vented type (recognisable by the multiple small open perforations at the side of the goggle) have a habit of letting through small hot shards of metal thrown up by angle grinders. Removing these once they have melted their way into the surface of your eye is not nice!

If you're using an angle grinder for sanding then respiratory protection is also essential since angle grinders have no in-built dust collection facility. When using an angle grinder to drive a wire brush, a leather apron is also to be recommended since picking small wire fragments of out of your stomach or groin is not generally considered to be a pleasant experience!

Take care when cutting or grinding metal, since the grinder will produce copious amounts of sparks. These not only hurt when directed against your person, but are also very able to start a fire should they fall on something flammable.

A word about dust

To say that an angle grinder used to cut masonry produces “dust” is really a mastery of understatement! When used outside you can quickly find yourself operating inside your own local fog. Not only that but you will be finding dust on yours and the neighbours' cars for weeks to come. If you wish to use an angle grinder inside for wall chasing, it is best to do so in a house that is unoccupied! Since by the time you have cut a three or four foot long chase in plaster, there is a good probability you will not even be able to see your hands in front of your face. Note that because of the dust problem a specialist wall chaser, or an SDS drill fitted with a chisel or a chasing gouge is actually a far more appropriate tool in most circumstances.

Other accessories

In addition to cutting and grinding discs, an angle grinder is also able to use a number of other types of accessory. These include flap discs for fast and aggressive sanding, wire brushes for rapid rust removal or paint stripping, and mortar rakes for brick removal and repointing activities. Mounting a flat backing pad will also enable the tool to be used for a sanding and polishing.

Quality indicators

The difference in quality between the high end and budget tools it's not as obvious with angle grinders as it is with some classes of power tool, since quality of finish is not usually an issue. Better quality tools will deliver more power to the cutting disc, and less vibration to the operator. On budget tools, the motors will not be rated for continuous operation, and switchgear may be of a lower quality. Better quality tools tend to have bearings and switch gear which are better sealed against ingress of dust. This is especially important when cutting masonry since the dust produced is highly abrasive and can also clog switches.

Accessories

Most angle grinders come with relatively few accessories. Typically you will get a spanner for enabling you to change the disc, and a side handle which can usually be fixed it to the body of the grinder in two or three places to help hold the machine steady.

If you find yourself changing discs frequently, you may find it simpler to buy a quick release locking nut. These replace the usual disc locking nut that requires a spanner to undo, with one that can be simply undone by pulling and twisting on a small lever it is a part of the nut. For prolonged use an anti-vibration handle may also be worthwhile.

Features

On the larger size of tool, slow start is a highly desirable feature, since it prevents the massive kick at switch-on. A removable disc guard can be useful since it will allow a wider range of accessories to be fitted to the tool.

Cordless angle grinders

Cordless angle grinders have appeared on the market recently. These offer the freedom from a power lead, Cordless angle grinders make high demands on their batteries, so you will need several and a rapid charger for continuous work.

Second hand tools

Nothing special to look for, other than making sure that the switch operates correctly, and the lead is undamaged. Pay particular attention to machines that have been used for heavily for cutting masonry. On poor quality tools the dust can result in a sticking power switch which can be very dangerous, as it can lead to a machine you are unable to turn off!

Uses

Uk.d-i-yers have used angle grinders to:

  • Grind off protruding lumps on a concrete floor
  • cut chases in walls
  • remove mortar from brick & block walls
  • as a high speed metal sander
  • remove paint
  • strip off plaster (wirewheel)
  • texture wood (wire wheel)
  • remove obstinate lumps of muck
  • cut metal goods up for disposal
  • cut bolts & threaded rod
  • cut heavy duty curtain rails
  • remove the head of a stuck fastener
  • rapid rivet removal
  • remove rusted outdoor metal fixings
  • remove rust
  • smooth welds
  • cutting metal tube
  • sharpen a shovel for lino removal
  • sharpen & regrind drill bits
  • sharpen cutlery - very fast
  • cut wood sheet where a saw could not acccess it
  • as a wood cutting tool along with a drill lathe to produce turned goods
  • remove old tile adhesive to make a flat level surface, with backing pad & coarse abrasive fibre disc.
  • cut angle iron

Disc Types

Grit Discs

Cutting disc
Grinding disc
SS cutting disc

Common cheap discs used for stone & metal cutting & grinding. Cutting discs are thin (typically around 2.5mm), grinding discs are thick (around 6mm or so).

Diamond discs are recommended instead of grit, as performance is vastly superior. There are however occasional tasks where these grit discs can perform better.

  • grinding HSS tool steel
  • accessing tight spots using a small worn down grit disc
  • cutting a 1/4" slot using a grinding disc

Main types of grit disc:

  • Stone cutting
  • Stone grinding
  • Metal cutting
  • Metal grinding

Other types:

  • Stainless steel cutting
  • Extra-thin (1mm)
    • a bit brittle
    • quicker cutting
    • handy when youre up a ladder etc
  • Aluminium & copper cutting
    • this can be done with ordinary metal cutting discs too, if not as well
  • See-through discs (large cutouts enable view of workpiece during use)

Diamond Discs

Diamond disc

Diamond Discs give a huge performance improvement on grit discs for nearly all tasks, and are now affordable for everyone.

  • Performance far superior to grit discs
  • Even basic ones will outlast at least a couple of dozen grit discs
  • Safer than grit discs, as a steel disc will not fly apart


Cutting Discs

  • Standard thin blades for cutting.
  • Available from a few pounds each


Diamond Grinding Discs

  • Diamond grinding areas on one side of the disc
  • Not cheap
  • Available with 1 or 2 rings of abrasive
  • Discs are heavier than other types

Flap wheels

Flap discs

  • plastic backed are preferred to aluminium
  • Don't catch the edges of the disk on the workpiece -

the disk shreds

  • A lightweight 7" flap disc is more controllable in a 9" grinder

Tile Cutting Discs

Tile disc

These have no thermal expansion slots. If worked hard without cooling they will heat up and buckle.

TC Grinding Discs

Tungsten carbide discs are a cheaper equivalent to diamond discs, harder & safer than grit discs, but not as hard as diamond.

Fibre disc

Fibre disc
Backing pad

These are a thin flexible fibre disc with abrasive resin bonded to one side of it. They need to be used with a backing pad.

This is the fastest stock removing sander, with linear speeds far in excess of other types of sander. This and the crescent shaped pressure area make them a poor choice for finish sanding.

For fastest stock removal, a fair amount of force can be put on the disc, so it bends as it goes round. However the discs don't last well used like this, they split and come apart after a while. Eye protection and gloves are essential.

Nylon mesh paint remover

Paint remover
  • Open nylon mesh with embedded abrasive

Wire wheel

Wire cup wheel
  • Good for stripping paint etc off masonry & metal
  • they quickly damage any surface that isn't very hard.
  • Great for removing rust & paintwork, esp. tarry paints that clog abrasives.
  • Some cheap ones shed bristles too much, some are fine.

The 3 main patterns of wire wheel are:

  • cup brush - least effective
  • wire wheel
  • twisted wire wheel - most effective

Sanding discs

A 2 part arrangement:

  1. Flexible plastic backing pad
  2. Fibre sanding disc

With a very coarse disc, ie 20-40 grit, the result is a sander with the fastest stock removal of all sander types. But these are fairly useless as finishing sanders, as its difficult to avoid creating crescent shaped gouges in the workpiece.

  • 3M's triangular sanding discs avoid the edge-crescent

problem.


Paint removers

Sponge pads

  • Good performance, but they shred rapidly if you catch an edge.
  • Handy for stripping aluminium or fibreglass without damaging the metal
  • Expensive and quick-wearing for steel.

Beartex discs

  • Good for taking paint off aluminium
  • not cheap

Wood Discs

  • Discs designed to carve wood
  • Not popular
  • all types have much more ability to eat flesh than grinding discs
  • There is more than one type of wood cutting disc. Solid disc types (eg Arbortech) are unpopular for their damage potential, but are much better behaved than the evil flesh eating chainsaw types below.
  • best to pick one that handles metal too, in case a nail is encountered

Chainsaw disc

  • Circlet wood carving disc
  • pic
  • a lot of potential for injury, most diyers won't use them


Sizes

1"

  • 1" - 1.5" abrasive dics are used on die grinders (aka dremel tools).

4"

  • Sometimes seen

4.5"

  • 115mm is the most commonly used size for diy
  • Wide range of discs easily available for 4.5" grinders
  • Cuts cant go very deep with a 115mm disc
  • Generally use an M14 disc fixing

5"

  • Used for wall chasers

9"

  • Popular large size for cutting deeper.
  • Gyroscopic effect affects controllability
  • they run much slower than 4.5", and don't cut a lot faster

Quality

The advantages of a good quality angle grinder:

  • longevity
  • better protected against dust
  • No-spanner nuts, with a hinge-out key for disk changing.
  • Guards easy enough to adjust to the best position that this might actually be done
  • Low-vibration side-handles (Metabo, and available as spares). Layers of neoprene pipe insulation (Armaflex) stuck to them makes a useful substitute/addition

Ancillaries

The first 2 are necessary. Don't be tempted to use a grinder without them.

Eye protection

  • Truly essential.
  • Goggles must be indirect vent to avoid eye injury
  • Some people prefer a hinged faceshield, but these are less safe against red hot sparks.

Ear protection

  • Necessary
  • When worn with a faceshield you might need ears with a swivel band that you can put to the back, otherwise an integrated hat & earmuff.
  • Ear defenders with radio are cheap nowadays. Good when grinding for hours at a stretch

Gloves

  • Thin leather keeps flying bits off.
  • Thick leather gives some vibration insulation too.
  • Best of all though are gel anti-vibration gloves (Arco, twenty quid). If you're grinding steel for welding (i.e. for hours), then "fizzy fingers" is really something to be avoided afterwards.

Apron

  • Aldi have leather welding aprons for cheap - less than I paid for the leather to make mine
  • Essential with wire brushes, some stick you with porcupine quills otherwise
  • When grinding, an apron keeps you cleaner and gives you something to kneel on

Dustmask

  • You need something, especially with stone
  • 3M 3000 / 4000 series are a good start

Dust reduction

  • needed when grinding masonry
  • makes the workspace a lot more human-friendly
  • the better options can turn a filthy clean-up afterwards into a quick run over with the hoover

Several possible solutions:

  • 12" Fan in window - not brilliant
  • vacuum cleaner nozzle taped to grinder - works well, but adds a little weight to the grinder and restricts movement
  • Ioniser - Makes concrete dust indoors fall out of suspension a lot quicker.
  • Water spray can help some - be sure to use an RCD
  • Wet floor also helps some

Tools

Budget grinders have a tool to undo the nut that holds discs on, but no easy means to remove wire brushes & flap wheels. The solution is to grind a spanner down in thickness so that it will fit and undo a wire brush.

Replacement spanners for removing discs are available if needed. Better than losing it is to cable tie it to the grinder's mains lead.

Safety

Angle grinders are one of the highest risk power tools, and users should know some basics to stay away from A&E.

Eye protection

Lots of people get eye injuries through using direct vent goggles. You need indirect vent.

Sparks

Angle grinding discs produce huge quantities of sparks, and good eye protection should always be worn. Direct vent goggles allow sparks to enter the eyes, indirect vent are needed.

Fools can be identified quickly on any site: people refusing protective eyewear when using an angle grinder are a risk to work with, and should be kept an eye on.

Sparks should be kept away from flammables, such as dry sawdust. Also avoid windscreen glass, into which the sparks can embed themselves leaving minor permanent damage to the glass surface. Sparks from metal cutting also stain concrete. Nothing is visible initially but as the sparks rust, staining appears.

Sparks must also be kept away from the eyes of passers by. Failure to do so can cause injury and/or result in legal problems and costs.

Control

An issue with angle grinders is their ability to go out of control, jump at you and bite off a lump of flesh. Forces on the grinder result from friction between disc and workpiece, which result either from pushing the tool too hard or not controlling its position accurately enough. In other words the best way to reduce risk is careful control of position, and not pushing it in a rush.

Control of position means always use 2 hands, don't overreach, and ensure a stable standing position, and don't let it wobble in use. It can be tempting to reach out for that last bit, but really its a mistake. These tools have 4.5" 11,000rpm cutter discs with little safety guarding, and you don't want to have a fight with one. You will lose. (Which bit you'll lose is anyone's guess.)

Don't push it. Push it a bit, the disc grabs the workpiece, and the direction it moves forces the machine hard into the workpiece, and the machine throws either itself, or a piece of masonry/metal, or disc fragments. Petrol driven machines behave much better in this respect, as they have a clutch, but electric grinders have nothing that will slip, plus the inertia of a kilowatt or so of high speed mains motor, so the throwing force is too high to control.

Keeping yourself out of the plane of the spinning disc reduces the risk of being bitten by kickback.


The Power-up Gotcha

If you plug it in and the switch on the grinder is on, it will spin, jump & bite.

Reducing risk:

  • Check switch position before applying power
  • Steel toecap boots
  • A soft start grinder


Unidentified Flying Objects

Angle grinders generate unidentified flying objects at times, hence the need for eyewear. (The objects are often identified afterwards.)

Face should be kept out of the plane of the disc, as this is the direction in which flying objects and broken discs are launched.

To avoid UFOs, don't push the machine too hard. This is usually what causes them. Push it a bit, the disc grabs the workpiece, and the direction it moves forces the machine hard into the workpiece, and the machine throws either itself or a piece of masonry/metal.

Petrol driven machines behave much better in this respect, as they have a clutch, but electric grinders have nothing that will slip, plus the inertia of a kilowatt or so of high speed mains motor.

Grind vs Cut

Don't use cutting discs to grind. They aren't tough enough to take side loads and are made even thinner by the grinding process. If you grind off the abrasive side they may shatter and launch a fleet of sharp abrasive flying objects. If you grind off the mesh side they can break explosively and cause serious injury.

Speed ratings

All discs and other tools for angle grinders have a speed rating. This should not be exceeded in use. Exceeding speed ratings puts more force on the disc than it is designed to take. Discs coming apart at 11,000rpm is a known issue with grinders.

Especially stupid would be putting a 6,000rpm disc in an 11,000 rpm machine. Yet 6,000rpm discs are on sale and some people do put them in 11,000rpm machines.

Diamond discs are much safer than grit discs in this respect.


Wrong Discs

Never use bench grinder discs, or any other disc not designed for an angle grinder. These other discs lack the explosion control bonded fibre mesh that angle grinder discs have, and generally will not survive the high spin speed, resulting in explosive failure. People have died mucking about with the wrong kind of disc.

Grit damage

Diamond discs throw removed grit so fast it can be hard on skin. Tough gloves & arm coverings are recommended.

See Also