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Classic Goldwing Technical Forums
GL1200
Here I go Again - Darksiding an 87 1200
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<blockquote data-quote="DaveKamp" data-source="post: 216944" data-attributes="member: 5122"><p>Yep- that's my choice of weapon for aluminum, steel, wood, and fiberglass (but only on cold days, with a Tyvek suit on... it's itchy!)</p><p></p><p>To get a really nice result on round things, the best way is to rotate the workpiece while holding the tool steady. I have a fairly large lathe (26" swing)... I've placed wheels in the chuck, and faceplate (just depends on the wheel), and used bits of metal welded, bolted, or clamped, and for the 4" angle grinder, the side-handle hole with an appropriate size bolt, and I lock the grinder ON, but power it through a cheap motor-speed-controller (Harbor Freight), then rotate the lathe spindle at slowest speed, and gently feed the grinder in. I use this same process with die grinders to do odd bore cleanup and profile changes on cylindrical parts, I actually made a toolpost fixture for one of my die grinders because it'll reach in really deep...</p><p></p><p>But for taking that lip off, it doesn't take fancy machinery... an old pair of wood sawhorses and four deck-screws will hold the axle bolt. Have a friend rotate the wheel by hand, steadily, while you hold the grinder steady, and it'll be dusted-off in just a few rotations.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="DaveKamp, post: 216944, member: 5122"] Yep- that's my choice of weapon for aluminum, steel, wood, and fiberglass (but only on cold days, with a Tyvek suit on... it's itchy!) To get a really nice result on round things, the best way is to rotate the workpiece while holding the tool steady. I have a fairly large lathe (26" swing)... I've placed wheels in the chuck, and faceplate (just depends on the wheel), and used bits of metal welded, bolted, or clamped, and for the 4" angle grinder, the side-handle hole with an appropriate size bolt, and I lock the grinder ON, but power it through a cheap motor-speed-controller (Harbor Freight), then rotate the lathe spindle at slowest speed, and gently feed the grinder in. I use this same process with die grinders to do odd bore cleanup and profile changes on cylindrical parts, I actually made a toolpost fixture for one of my die grinders because it'll reach in really deep... But for taking that lip off, it doesn't take fancy machinery... an old pair of wood sawhorses and four deck-screws will hold the axle bolt. Have a friend rotate the wheel by hand, steadily, while you hold the grinder steady, and it'll be dusted-off in just a few rotations. [/QUOTE]
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GL1200
Here I go Again - Darksiding an 87 1200
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