Nicholas Farr | 13/05/2022 18:34:46 |
![]() 3988 forum posts 1799 photos | Hi, there is info on mounting grinding wheels in my album Mounting dressing Trueing and Dressing and Wheel Classification. Regards Nick. |
James Alford | 14/05/2022 08:20:36 |
501 forum posts 88 photos | Posted by Nicholas Farr on 13/05/2022 18:34:46:
Hi, there is info on mounting grinding wheels in my album Mounting dressing Trueing and Dressing and Wheel Classification. Regards Nick. Thank you. This is very useful.
Regards, James. |
Neil Lickfold | 14/05/2022 10:03:52 |
1025 forum posts 204 photos | Make sure that the wheel will still Ring, before you mount that wheel onto your grinder. If it does not ring, it will be cracked somewhere. Neil |
martin perman | 14/05/2022 14:04:13 |
![]() 2095 forum posts 75 photos | After reading the above I'm amazed that some suggested that opening the hole of a grinding wheel would be ok, as a retired service engineer I've had to repair centreless grinders and cylindrical grinders after a wheel let go, if they can bend metal then god help anybody daft enough to do it. Martin P |
Mark Rand | 14/05/2022 15:41:35 |
1505 forum posts 56 photos | Posted by martin perman on 14/05/2022 14:04:13:
After reading the above I'm amazed that some suggested that opening the hole of a grinding wheel would be ok, as a retired service engineer I've had to repair centreless grinders and cylindrical grinders after a wheel let go, if they can bend metal then god help anybody daft enough to do it. Martin P Of course it's ok. How do you think the holes get made in the first place?
Opening up a hole or truing it isn't the same thing as cracking the wheel... |
martin perman | 14/05/2022 17:01:16 |
![]() 2095 forum posts 75 photos | In a mould with the rest of the wheel around a former as told to me by a sales engineer when I was an apprentice. Martin P |
bernard towers | 14/05/2022 17:44:25 |
1221 forum posts 161 photos | Yes with you Martin they are moulded with the centre bush in the mould. |
Samsaranda | 14/05/2022 19:00:34 |
![]() 1688 forum posts 16 photos | Definitely moulded, you can see that if you look closely at the wheel before mounting it. Dave W |
Baz | 14/05/2022 19:32:38 |
1033 forum posts 2 photos | Martin is correct, some were, maybe still are made with a lead or lead like material in the centre, others are 1 1/4 diameter with reducing bushes, the only part of the wheel that you fiddle about with is the outside diameter, and that is with a dresser. I have seen wheels let go and the damage caused, only a moron would fiddle about with the bore, just my two cents worth, from someone who worked for a company making grinding wheels. |
Mark Rand | 14/05/2022 20:16:38 |
1505 forum posts 56 photos | After which at least some of the bores are reamed to size, just as the outside surfaces may be machined to size.
One doesn't think twice about dressing the outside of a wheel (or shouldn't, anyway). The bore is no different from the periphery or sides. They're ceramics, not magic. Ring testing is something that should be done before mounting any wheel. |
Nicholas Farr | 14/05/2022 21:54:43 |
![]() 3988 forum posts 1799 photos | Hi, on one of my abrasive wheel courses that I attended, we were shown a film about the basics of grinding wheel manufacture and the wheels were moulded and a thin cardboard tube was placed on a central mandrill in the mould. Once the wheels were set the next stage was to balance them and the process was automated in which the machine would spin the wheel and checked for balance, wherever there was any imbalance the wheel would have a calculated amount of chalk vibrated into the wheel and the wheel would be rechecked for balance and any additional chalk added in the correct places until satisfactory balance was achieved. On my courses that I've attended we were told the hole should not be altered and the sides should never be dressed. Dos & don'ts for abrasive wheels Regards Nick. |
Nigel Graham 2 | 14/05/2022 23:12:07 |
3293 forum posts 112 photos | ... with one of the Dont's now, in industry, being Don't replace a wheel unless you are trained and competent to do so. Which means you would not even dream of trying to modify it other than conventional periphery-dressing! |
Mark Rand | 15/05/2022 09:39:49 |
1505 forum posts 56 photos | Posted by Nicholas Farr on 14/05/2022 21:54:43:
On my courses that I've attended we were told the hole should not be altered and the sides should never be dressed. Dos & don'ts for abrasive wheels Regards Nick. The link is irrelevant. It's talking about resin bonded disks, not surface, pedestal or tool grinding vitreous wheels.
I'll leave people to their apprehensions and assume that none of them have ever had to do any form grinding, face grinding or endmill sharpening.
Have a nice day. |
Michael Gilligan | 15/05/2022 09:52:45 |
![]() 23121 forum posts 1360 photos | Not directly relevant to the current debate … But From another recent thread: . It is interesting to note that the Current HSE Guidance is much less dogmatic than the old Regulations: https://www.hse.gov.uk/pubns/books/hsg17.htm … Well worth downloading ^^^ . MichaelG. |
John P | 15/05/2022 10:26:37 |
451 forum posts 268 photos | Posted by Mark Rand 15/05/2022 09:39:49 I'll leave people to their apprehensions and assume that none of them have ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------- How very true ,bring up any of these grinding type of threads and you see John |
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