Angle Grinder Woodwork Test: Difference between revisions
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Put a 80 Grit flap disk in a small angle grinder: | Put a 80 Grit flap disk in a small angle grinder: | ||
[[image:AGRoundoverZirconiumFlapDisc.jpg|512px]] | [[image:AGRoundoverZirconiumFlapDisc.jpg|512px]] | ||
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Which struck me as adequate for some bench seating slats (which was what promoted the discussion). A final sand by hand with a foam sanding block will take out any marks left by the disk. | Which struck me as adequate for some bench seating slats (which was what promoted the discussion). A final sand by hand with a foam sanding block will take out any marks left by the disk. | ||
(with | (with hindsight, 80g was nowhere near aggressive enough for white oak, which is an absolute pig to sand - 40g would have done the job more quickly!) | ||
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Latest revision as of 02:41, 3 January 2025
This is just a quick test to see how easy/effective it is to do a roundover operation on wood using an abrasive flap disk in an angle grinder in place of the more traditional hand plane or router.
I Started with some well seasoned White Oak:
Put a 80 Grit flap disk in a small angle grinder:
And then made several passes along the edge with the disk. Doing several passes along the corner at about 45 degrees to put a bevel on it, then furhter passes as sharper and shallower: angles to feather out the corners into a pencil round.
The result:
Which struck me as adequate for some bench seating slats (which was what promoted the discussion). A final sand by hand with a foam sanding block will take out any marks left by the disk.
(with hindsight, 80g was nowhere near aggressive enough for white oak, which is an absolute pig to sand - 40g would have done the job more quickly!)