Badger_McLetcher
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posted on 3/8/14 at 10:29 PM |
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Which tool to get into corners?
I'm after a tool to use just to take down some welds in awkward locations (corners mainly), so I figured a die grinder may be the best job, I
was thinking one of Ferm Rotary Combitool Multitool Combi Multi Tool Die Grinder 40pc 240v Electric as I have
neither an air supply nor much money at this point. Any thoughts on this? Push comes to shove I could just try to file them, but I'd prefer not
to have to do that
If disfunction is a function, then I must be some kind of genius.
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dave r
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posted on 4/8/14 at 05:32 AM |
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to be honest a hand file will be possibly quicker than one of those....
you would be better off with
click me
better off apart from the pocket that is!...
i have one, and with a carbide burr they rip the metal off
I'd love to give my imaginary friend a great big hug,
but this jacket makes it impossible.
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mark chandler
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posted on 4/8/14 at 07:54 AM |
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Those little grinding stones will disappear into dust within seconds, you will also need quality Tungsten carbide burrs
eBay Item
[Edited on 4/8/14 by mark chandler]
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Irony
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posted on 4/8/14 at 07:58 AM |
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You'll get nowhere with that tiny little thing. I have one and it's really useful for jewellery style grinding stuff. For welds
you'll be there all day and you'll be forever breaking bits.
Never used one but I might get one of these hooked up to a 240v drill.
Flexi drill shaft thing
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jps
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posted on 4/8/14 at 11:22 AM |
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quote: Originally posted by Badger_McLetcher
I'm after a tool to use just to take down some welds in awkward locations (corners mainly), so I figured a die grinder may be the best job, I
was thinking one of Ferm Rotary Combitool Multitool Combi Multi Tool Die Grinder 40pc 240v Electric as I have
neither an air supply nor much money at this point. Any thoughts on this? Push comes to shove I could just try to file them, but I'd prefer not
to have to do that
I've just done some grinding out of welds in corners using a tool like that rotary one you've linked to - using the tiny grinding stones
that are shown in the pic. It did get the job done but the stones were fairly well destroyed and the tool isn't faring much better (the chuck is
also knackered).
If I were doing the job again i'd think carefully about whether the welds needed grinding back. For me it wasn't worth spending lots of
money on the proper tooling - but equally so the job probably wasn't actually necessary at all!
RE: using a 240v drill - I was advised on here that the speed wouldn't be high enough...
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omega 24 v6
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posted on 4/8/14 at 11:28 AM |
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pear shape rotary burr for the leccy drill.??
If it looks wrong it probably is wrong.
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big_wasa
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posted on 4/8/14 at 11:28 AM |
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Drill would do the job but it will knacker the bearings.
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Minicooper
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posted on 4/8/14 at 11:43 AM |
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I've been using carbibe burrs in my bosch drill for 20 years now, still going strong. It is an old heavy duty drill, metal gears and all so that
is probably why it's still going well
Cheers
David
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nick205
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posted on 4/8/14 at 01:00 PM |
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Have to ask...do you actually need to grind the welds down?
Unless you have to fit something square and tight into the corner, why spend time removing material. At best it might look more aesthetically
pleasing (if it's even visible) at worst it might weaken then weld.
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steve m
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posted on 4/8/14 at 01:05 PM |
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As Nick Said ^^^^^
Any outside welds were a panel may fit flush over I used an angry grinder with a flap wheel, and it got the welds flush with the metal around it,
any non visable welds I left, to add to the strength (I hope!)
Steve
Thats was probably spelt wrong, or had some grammer, that the "grammer police have to have a moan at
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Slimy38
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posted on 4/8/14 at 01:58 PM |
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I use a powerfile for some of my internal welds, it can get quite deep into a right angle, and the wheel on the end creates a smooth curve in the
weld. It can't get very deep into a corner but you can certainly tidy things up. It's close to a flap wheel on a grinder in terms of
material removal efficiency.
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Badger_McLetcher
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posted on 4/8/14 at 04:27 PM |
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quote: Originally posted by nick205
Have to ask...do you actually need to grind the welds down?
Unless you have to fit something square and tight into the corner, why spend time removing material. At best it might look more aesthetically
pleasing (if it's even visible) at worst it might weaken then weld.
Thanks for the replies guys. The reason behind it is that I am not so confident on the quality of a couple of the welds, I want to grind them right
back and re-weld them. Also some of them are pretty large and could use some trimming back. I already did this on the ones I can get to with the angle
grinder, but to be honest I'd forgotten until a mate popped over yesterday and spotted a couple of the more obvious ones.
Plus I guess if I get a nice tool I may be able to use it for head work and when I do my new exhaust manifold
[Edited on 4/8/14 by Badger_McLetcher]
If disfunction is a function, then I must be some kind of genius.
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