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Re: Moments of Terror in Machining

MERTON B BAKER
 

My workhorse toolbit grinder is a 1/2HP 6" Delta that I won in a raffle at a
shop teacher convention in 1954. The cord burned off in the fire I had here
in 1975, but I replaced the cord, and it's still going strong. Worn out 4
sets of wheels, I think. There is something to be said for "Made in USA",
at least for stuff from firms that have been around for a while. Mert

-----Original Message-----
From: 7x12minilathe@...
[mailto:7x12minilathe@...]On Behalf Of Vince Vielhaber
Sent: Thursday, October 06, 2011 11:05 AM
To: 7x12minilathe@...
Subject: Re: [7x12minilathe] Re: Moments of Terror in Machining



I have a cheap one I got from Cummins Tools back when they'd drive
a couple of semi trucks to various places. I can sharpen a HSS bit
on it but it doesn't hold its speed very well.

My neighbor has a Delta that won't slow down unless you shut it off,
I imagine a heavy enough piece of steel will slow it down but not that
I've found yet.

At the day job we have one (dunno what brand) that runs on 480 3 phase
and has a build in dust collector. I don't imagine you can easily slow
that one down.

As far as balance and things like that, the only problem my cheap one
has is cheap wheels. Until I built a vibrating table for doing ceramic
mold stuff, when I poured a mold I'd start the grinder and put the mold
on the motor to bust up the air bubbles. It got alot better after I
dressed the wheels.




On Thu, 6 Oct 2011, Kevin wrote:

And to follow up. I did some research since I'm now in the market for a
new grinder :-)

Is Baldor the ONLY company not sourcing their grinders from China or
Taiwan?

I know Craftsman, DeWalt (B&D), and the others have moved production
overseas, but I was surprised that Delta, Rockwell, Porter-Cable, and
especially Palmgren all seem to be using Chinese factories.

So this may be a little off topic, but I'd love to hear comments about the
different grinders and people's thoughts, experiences with the different
brands.

Obviously, I'd love a Baldor, but starting at over $500 retail it's kind
of tough to justify spending as much on the grinder as I did on the lathe.
:-) And yes, I'm checking craigslist!

Kevin

--- In 7x12minilathe@..., "Kevin" <kcc-groups@...> wrote:

I was sharpening some tools on my 6" Chinese (Homier) grinder today when
I started to smell something a little funny but I continue working. After
about 10 minutes, I notice that the grinder is getting hot so I go to get my
infrared thermometer.

In the next few minutes, I watched the grinder go from 130 to over 180
degrees Fahrenheit. I turned it off.

Just to get a complete picture I took off the wheels and turned the
grinder on with no load. Within 5 minutes, the temperature was over 200
degrees. This is where I chickened out and reached to turn it off, but I
saw a wisp of smoke coming from the grinder.

This grinder cannot have more than a few hours on it at most. I only
purchased it about 2 years ago and it's ground maybe a dozen lathe tools.

It was cheap so I don't mind the money so much, but the thought if this
had been a motor on a band saw or other tool that is more automated, the
resulting fire would be very bad.

So one more example of being careful of the ratings on the Chinese
motors.


Kevin



------------------------------------

Yahoo! Groups Links




Vince.
--
Michigan VHF Corp.


------------------------------------

Yahoo! Groups Links


Re: Moments of Terror in Machining

MERTON B BAKER
 

The nice thing about Sears tooling, is if it heats up and smokes, or vibrates off the table, you can return it and try the replacement in the store. The Chinese ones I had the bad luck with were from Tools Now. In this shop, It's name has been changed to Tools Never.

Mert

-----Original Message-----
From: 7x12minilathe@... [mailto:7x12minilathe@...]On Behalf Of warren hughes
Sent: Thursday, October 06, 2011 2:44 PM
To: 7x12minilathe@...
Subject: Re: [7x12minilathe] Re: Moments of Terror in Machining




Have two craftsman's and both have been good the newest one did have a sticky switch problem but apron inspetion there seemed to be some grinding dust getting in. i cleaned out the switch area and sealed it with some silicon. it has been flawless ever since. Warren

--- On Thu, 10/6/11, Mark Cason <farmerboy1967@...> wrote:


From: Mark Cason <farmerboy1967@...>
Subject: Re: [7x12minilathe] Re: Moments of Terror in Machining
To: 7x12minilathe@...
Date: Thursday, October 6, 2011, 11:42 AM



On 10/06/2011 09:13 AM, Kevin wrote:
>
> And to follow up. I did some research since I'm now in the market for
> a new grinder :-)
>
> Is Baldor the ONLY company not sourcing their grinders from China or
> Taiwan?
>
> I know Craftsman, DeWalt (B&D), and the others have moved production
> overseas, but I was surprised that Delta, Rockwell, Porter-Cable, and
> especially Palmgren all seem to be using Chinese factories.
>
> So this may be a little off topic, but I'd love to hear comments about
> the different grinders and people's thoughts, experiences with the
> different brands.
>
> Obviously, I'd love a Baldor, but starting at over $500 retail it's
> kind of tough to justify spending as much on the grinder as I did on
> the lathe. :-) And yes, I'm checking craigslist!
>
> Kevin
>

I had that same grinder, and it lasted me about 10 minutes. The
first second I started it up, I knew something was wrong, as the wheels
would not run true. I tried truing them up, but the motor burnt up
before I could finish. I bought another one, more expensive than the
first, and it was almost as bad.

The wheels were warped, and the bearings weren't true, and one
bearing was far worse than the other, so the shaft would turn in an
ellipse. Nothing can be done about that, except replace the bearings,
which would've cost more than what I spent on the grinder in the first
place, and I would've still have to replace the wheels.

I now have a 10" Wilton Grinder that I bought from a local tool
shop. Even on sale, it was expensive, but well worth it. It runs as
smooth as silk. Out of the box, it had very little vibration, and after
taking a small cleanup pass with a diamond dresser, it ran even better.
I haven't found anything that would bog the motor down, even with some
fairly aggressive grinding.

The grinder was made in Taiwan, not China, so the level of
craftsmanship it just a tad better.

--
-Mark

Ne M'oubliez ---Family Motto
Hope for the best, plan for the worst ---Personal Motto


Re: Moments of Terror in Machining

 

Mert

I can. Only agree with you, my grinder is bolted down on a shelf, still tries to take the shelf off the wall.

Kind regards,

David Wiseman

Sent from my BlackBerry mobile phone

-----Original Message-----
From: "MERTON B BAKER" <mertbaker@...>
Sender: 7x12minilathe@...
Date: Thu, 06 Oct 2011 12:32:39
To: <7x12minilathe@...>
Reply-To: 7x12minilathe@...
Subject: RE: [7x12minilathe] Re: Moments of Terror in Machining

My problem with overseas grinders are First, the two I've bought take
nearly a full minute to get up to speed, and nearly ten seconds to stop
under load, grinding toolbits. Second the wheels are so far out of balance,
that they would hp around on the floor, didn't dare run 'em up on the bench
for fear they'd fall off. With no wheels on, there was still a little
tendency to walk around.



-----Original Message-----
From: 7x12minilathe@...
[mailto:7x12minilathe@...]On Behalf Of fmvf@...
Sent: Thursday, October 06, 2011 11:04 AM
To: 7x12minilathe@...
Subject: [7x12minilathe] Re: Moments of Terror in Machining


I purchased a grinder from HF a long time ago when quality was an unknown
word "there" (across the ocean). The grinder suffered similar symptoms,
using it for 5 minutes it would get too hot to touch. I stopped using it
and made a grinder from an old pump motor (C-flange) and a set of pillow
block bearings mounted on a piece of channel 6" wide X 1/4" thick. This set
up lasted me almost 22 years but finally had to retire it because the
internal wiring, not the windings, got so brittle the insulation started to
crack in several places.

I recently purchased another one from HF and I'm happy to report that I can
use it for about 30 minutes before it gets too hot. They're not too much
different from what my first one was, just a little better. Quality
grinders cost way too much for us to justify buying one.

Frank.

--- In 7x12minilathe@..., "Kevin" <kcc-groups@...> wrote:

And to follow up. I did some research since I'm now in the market for a
new grinder :-)

Is Baldor the ONLY company not sourcing their grinders from China or
Taiwan?

I know Craftsman, DeWalt (B&D), and the others have moved production
overseas, but I was surprised that Delta, Rockwell, Porter-Cable, and
especially Palmgren all seem to be using Chinese factories.

So this may be a little off topic, but I'd love to hear comments about the
different grinders and people's thoughts, experiences with the different
brands.

Obviously, I'd love a Baldor, but starting at over $500 retail it's kind
of tough to justify spending as much on the grinder as I did on the lathe.
:-) And yes, I'm checking craigslist!

Kevin

--- In 7x12minilathe@..., "Kevin" <kcc-groups@> wrote:

I was sharpening some tools on my 6" Chinese (Homier) grinder today when
I started to smell something a little funny but I continue working. After
about 10 minutes, I notice that the grinder is getting hot so I go to get my
infrared thermometer.

In the next few minutes, I watched the grinder go from 130 to over 180
degrees Fahrenheit. I turned it off.

Just to get a complete picture I took off the wheels and turned the
grinder on with no load. Within 5 minutes, the temperature was over 200
degrees. This is where I chickened out and reached to turn it off, but I
saw a wisp of smoke coming from the grinder.

This grinder cannot have more than a few hours on it at most. I only
purchased it about 2 years ago and it's ground maybe a dozen lathe tools.

It was cheap so I don't mind the money so much, but the thought if this
had been a motor on a band saw or other tool that is more automated, the
resulting fire would be very bad.

So one more example of being careful of the ratings on the Chinese
motors.


Kevin



------------------------------------

Yahoo! Groups Links





------------------------------------

Yahoo! Groups Links


Re: Moments of Terror in Machining

 

My guess is that despite all coming from China, the final quality (hopefully) is different and dependant on the spec put to the factory.

I have a grinder with a label carrying a well known UK brand. Unfortunately that is where the quality ends. The wheels are not in balance, can't get them to balance either. Soon it will be look for another but better, maybe even second hand might be better.

Kind regards,

David Wiseman

Sent from my BlackBerry mobile phone

-----Original Message-----
From: "Kevin" <kcc-groups@...>
Sender: 7x12minilathe@...
Date: Thu, 06 Oct 2011 14:13:12
To: <7x12minilathe@...>
Reply-To: 7x12minilathe@...
Subject: [7x12minilathe] Re: Moments of Terror in Machining

And to follow up. I did some research since I'm now in the market for a new grinder :-)

Is Baldor the ONLY company not sourcing their grinders from China or Taiwan?

I know Craftsman, DeWalt (B&D), and the others have moved production overseas, but I was surprised that Delta, Rockwell, Porter-Cable, and especially Palmgren all seem to be using Chinese factories.

So this may be a little off topic, but I'd love to hear comments about the different grinders and people's thoughts, experiences with the different brands.

Obviously, I'd love a Baldor, but starting at over $500 retail it's kind of tough to justify spending as much on the grinder as I did on the lathe. :-) And yes, I'm checking craigslist!

Kevin

--- In 7x12minilathe@..., "Kevin" <kcc-groups@...> wrote:

I was sharpening some tools on my 6" Chinese (Homier) grinder today when I started to smell something a little funny but I continue working. After about 10 minutes, I notice that the grinder is getting hot so I go to get my infrared thermometer.

In the next few minutes, I watched the grinder go from 130 to over 180 degrees Fahrenheit. I turned it off.

Just to get a complete picture I took off the wheels and turned the grinder on with no load. Within 5 minutes, the temperature was over 200 degrees. This is where I chickened out and reached to turn it off, but I saw a wisp of smoke coming from the grinder.

This grinder cannot have more than a few hours on it at most. I only purchased it about 2 years ago and it's ground maybe a dozen lathe tools.

It was cheap so I don't mind the money so much, but the thought if this had been a motor on a band saw or other tool that is more automated, the resulting fire would be very bad.

So one more example of being careful of the ratings on the Chinese motors.


Kevin



------------------------------------

Yahoo! Groups Links


Re: Moments of Terror in Machining

Ray Kornele
 

The problem was, likely, not due to faulty ratings, but, faulty workmanship- IOW, it was a cheap piece of Chinese junk(not the boat).China build cheap tools. That's why they are cheap.

I use mostly cheap tools from China, Japan, Korea... I prefer the Japanese ones.

KrazyKyngeKorny (Krazy, not stupid)


On Thu, Oct 6, 2011 at 7:07 AM, Kevin <kcc-groups@...> wrote:
?

I was sharpening some tools on my 6" Chinese (Homier) grinder today when I started to smell something a little funny but I continue working. After about 10 minutes, I notice that the grinder is getting hot so I go to get my infrared thermometer.



Re: Moments of Terror in Machining

 

Have two?craftsman's?and both have been good the newest one did have a sticky switch problem but?apron?inspetion there seemed to be some grinding dust getting in. i cleaned out the switch area and sealed it with some?silicon. it has been flawless ever since. Warren


--- On Thu, 10/6/11, Mark Cason wrote:

From: Mark Cason
Subject: Re: [7x12minilathe] Re: Moments of Terror in Machining
To: 7x12minilathe@...
Date: Thursday, October 6, 2011, 11:42 AM

?

On 10/06/2011 09:13 AM, Kevin wrote:
>
> And to follow up. I did some research since I'm now in the market for
> a new grinder :-)
>
> Is Baldor the ONLY company not sourcing their grinders from China or
> Taiwan?
>
> I know Craftsman, DeWalt (B&D), and the others have moved production
> overseas, but I was surprised that Delta, Rockwell, Porter-Cable, and
> especially Palmgren all seem to be using Chinese factories.
>
> So this may be a little off topic, but I'd love to hear comments about
> the different grinders and people's thoughts, experiences with the
> different brands.
>
> Obviously, I'd love a Baldor, but starting at over $500 retail it's
> kind of tough to justify spending as much on the grinder as I did on
> the lathe. :-) And yes, I'm checking craigslist!
>
> Kevin
>

I had that same grinder, and it lasted me about 10 minutes. The
first second I started it up, I knew something was wrong, as the wheels
would not run true. I tried truing them up, but the motor burnt up
before I could finish. I bought another one, more expensive than the
first, and it was almost as bad.

The wheels were warped, and the bearings weren't true, and one
bearing was far worse than the other, so the shaft would turn in an
ellipse. Nothing can be done about that, except replace the bearings,
which would've cost more than what I spent on the grinder in the first
place, and I would've still have to replace the wheels.

I now have a 10" Wilton Grinder that I bought from a local tool
shop. Even on sale, it was expensive, but well worth it. It runs as
smooth as silk. Out of the box, it had very little vibration, and after
taking a small cleanup pass with a diamond dresser, it ran even better.
I haven't found anything that would bog the motor down, even with some
fairly aggressive grinding.

The grinder was made in Taiwan, not China, so the level of
craftsmanship it just a tad better.

--
-Mark

Ne M'oubliez ---Family Motto
Hope for the best, plan for the worst ---Personal Motto


Re: Moments of Terror in Machining

 

Film at 11!

--- In 7x12minilathe@..., "Paul" <paul_probus@...> wrote:

If it were me, I'd place it outside away from the house or shop, hook it up to extension cords and see if it actually catches fire. :) But I am a bit of a pyromanic. :)

Paul

--- In 7x12minilathe@..., "Kevin" <kcc-groups@> wrote:

I was sharpening some tools on my 6" Chinese (Homier) grinder today when I started to smell something a little funny but I continue working. After about 10 minutes, I notice that the grinder is getting hot so I go to get my infrared thermometer.

In the next few minutes, I watched the grinder go from 130 to over 180 degrees Fahrenheit. I turned it off.

Just to get a complete picture I took off the wheels and turned the grinder on with no load. Within 5 minutes, the temperature was over 200 degrees. This is where I chickened out and reached to turn it off, but I saw a wisp of smoke coming from the grinder.

This grinder cannot have more than a few hours on it at most. I only purchased it about 2 years ago and it's ground maybe a dozen lathe tools.

It was cheap so I don't mind the money so much, but the thought if this had been a motor on a band saw or other tool that is more automated, the resulting fire would be very bad.

So one more example of being careful of the ratings on the Chinese motors.


Kevin


Re: Moments of Terror in Machining

Mark Cason
 

On 10/06/2011 09:13 AM, Kevin wrote:

And to follow up. I did some research since I'm now in the market for a new grinder :-)

Is Baldor the ONLY company not sourcing their grinders from China or Taiwan?

I know Craftsman, DeWalt (B&D), and the others have moved production overseas, but I was surprised that Delta, Rockwell, Porter-Cable, and especially Palmgren all seem to be using Chinese factories.

So this may be a little off topic, but I'd love to hear comments about the different grinders and people's thoughts, experiences with the different brands.

Obviously, I'd love a Baldor, but starting at over $500 retail it's kind of tough to justify spending as much on the grinder as I did on the lathe. :-) And yes, I'm checking craigslist!

Kevin
I had that same grinder, and it lasted me about 10 minutes. The first second I started it up, I knew something was wrong, as the wheels would not run true. I tried truing them up, but the motor burnt up before I could finish. I bought another one, more expensive than the first, and it was almost as bad.

The wheels were warped, and the bearings weren't true, and one bearing was far worse than the other, so the shaft would turn in an ellipse. Nothing can be done about that, except replace the bearings, which would've cost more than what I spent on the grinder in the first place, and I would've still have to replace the wheels.

I now have a 10" Wilton Grinder that I bought from a local tool shop. Even on sale, it was expensive, but well worth it. It runs as smooth as silk. Out of the box, it had very little vibration, and after taking a small cleanup pass with a diamond dresser, it ran even better. I haven't found anything that would bog the motor down, even with some fairly aggressive grinding.

The grinder was made in Taiwan, not China, so the level of craftsmanship it just a tad better.

--
-Mark

Ne M'oubliez ---Family Motto
Hope for the best, plan for the worst ---Personal Motto


Re: Moments of Terror in Machining

 

i have the hf tool grinder - about 175 with coupon. i bought a diamond wheel on sale at enco for 65. so have a good setup. tubelcain has a good youtube video on sharpening drill bits. I have used it for sharpening carbide bits - works very good. The wheel is so true you dont know its on when turning at 3000. jb

On Oct 6, 2011, at 10:07 AM, "Kevin" <kcc-groups@...> wrote:

I was sharpening some tools on my 6" Chinese (Homier) grinder today when I started to smell something a little funny but I continue working. After about 10 minutes, I notice that the grinder is getting hot so I go to get my infrared thermometer.

In the next few minutes, I watched the grinder go from 130 to over 180 degrees Fahrenheit. I turned it off.

Just to get a complete picture I took off the wheels and turned the grinder on with no load. Within 5 minutes, the temperature was over 200 degrees. This is where I chickened out and reached to turn it off, but I saw a wisp of smoke coming from the grinder.

This grinder cannot have more than a few hours on it at most. I only purchased it about 2 years ago and it's ground maybe a dozen lathe tools.

It was cheap so I don't mind the money so much, but the thought if this had been a motor on a band saw or other tool that is more automated, the resulting fire would be very bad.

So one more example of being careful of the ratings on the Chinese motors.


Kevin





------------------------------------

Yahoo! Groups Links



Re: Moments of Terror in Machining

MERTON B BAKER
 

My problem with overseas grinders are First, the two I've bought take
nearly a full minute to get up to speed, and nearly ten seconds to stop
under load, grinding toolbits. Second the wheels are so far out of balance,
that they would hp around on the floor, didn't dare run 'em up on the bench
for fear they'd fall off. With no wheels on, there was still a little
tendency to walk around.

-----Original Message-----
From: 7x12minilathe@...
[mailto:7x12minilathe@...]On Behalf Of fmvf@...
Sent: Thursday, October 06, 2011 11:04 AM
To: 7x12minilathe@...
Subject: [7x12minilathe] Re: Moments of Terror in Machining


I purchased a grinder from HF a long time ago when quality was an unknown
word "there" (across the ocean). The grinder suffered similar symptoms,
using it for 5 minutes it would get too hot to touch. I stopped using it
and made a grinder from an old pump motor (C-flange) and a set of pillow
block bearings mounted on a piece of channel 6" wide X 1/4" thick. This set
up lasted me almost 22 years but finally had to retire it because the
internal wiring, not the windings, got so brittle the insulation started to
crack in several places.

I recently purchased another one from HF and I'm happy to report that I can
use it for about 30 minutes before it gets too hot. They're not too much
different from what my first one was, just a little better. Quality
grinders cost way too much for us to justify buying one.

Frank.

--- In 7x12minilathe@..., "Kevin" <kcc-groups@...> wrote:

And to follow up. I did some research since I'm now in the market for a
new grinder :-)

Is Baldor the ONLY company not sourcing their grinders from China or
Taiwan?

I know Craftsman, DeWalt (B&D), and the others have moved production
overseas, but I was surprised that Delta, Rockwell, Porter-Cable, and
especially Palmgren all seem to be using Chinese factories.

So this may be a little off topic, but I'd love to hear comments about the
different grinders and people's thoughts, experiences with the different
brands.

Obviously, I'd love a Baldor, but starting at over $500 retail it's kind
of tough to justify spending as much on the grinder as I did on the lathe.
:-) And yes, I'm checking craigslist!

Kevin

--- In 7x12minilathe@..., "Kevin" <kcc-groups@> wrote:

I was sharpening some tools on my 6" Chinese (Homier) grinder today when
I started to smell something a little funny but I continue working. After
about 10 minutes, I notice that the grinder is getting hot so I go to get my
infrared thermometer.

In the next few minutes, I watched the grinder go from 130 to over 180
degrees Fahrenheit. I turned it off.

Just to get a complete picture I took off the wheels and turned the
grinder on with no load. Within 5 minutes, the temperature was over 200
degrees. This is where I chickened out and reached to turn it off, but I
saw a wisp of smoke coming from the grinder.

This grinder cannot have more than a few hours on it at most. I only
purchased it about 2 years ago and it's ground maybe a dozen lathe tools.

It was cheap so I don't mind the money so much, but the thought if this
had been a motor on a band saw or other tool that is more automated, the
resulting fire would be very bad.

So one more example of being careful of the ratings on the Chinese
motors.


Kevin



------------------------------------

Yahoo! Groups Links


Re: Moments of Terror in Machining

 

If it were me, I'd place it outside away from the house or shop, hook it up to extension cords and see if it actually catches fire. :) But I am a bit of a pyromanic. :)

Paul

--- In 7x12minilathe@..., "Kevin" <kcc-groups@...> wrote:

I was sharpening some tools on my 6" Chinese (Homier) grinder today when I started to smell something a little funny but I continue working. After about 10 minutes, I notice that the grinder is getting hot so I go to get my infrared thermometer.

In the next few minutes, I watched the grinder go from 130 to over 180 degrees Fahrenheit. I turned it off.

Just to get a complete picture I took off the wheels and turned the grinder on with no load. Within 5 minutes, the temperature was over 200 degrees. This is where I chickened out and reached to turn it off, but I saw a wisp of smoke coming from the grinder.

This grinder cannot have more than a few hours on it at most. I only purchased it about 2 years ago and it's ground maybe a dozen lathe tools.

It was cheap so I don't mind the money so much, but the thought if this had been a motor on a band saw or other tool that is more automated, the resulting fire would be very bad.

So one more example of being careful of the ratings on the Chinese motors.


Kevin


Re: Moments of Terror in Machining

 

You might have to get more active than watching Craigslist. Go to flea markets, garage/yard sales, etc. My dad picked up a few quality grinders that way and he's not even looking, just could not walk away because of how cheap the price was. Granted, they are not Baldors, but MIA (made in America) Craftsman's and Delta's and I am not sure what else. As someone else said, you can always make your own with pillow blocks and shafting and a separate motor via belt drive, though if you go that route, I would suggest going to a 10" wheel.


Paul

--- In 7x12minilathe@..., "Kevin" <kcc-groups@...> wrote:

And to follow up. I did some research since I'm now in the market for a new grinder :-)

Is Baldor the ONLY company not sourcing their grinders from China or Taiwan?

I know Craftsman, DeWalt (B&D), and the others have moved production overseas, but I was surprised that Delta, Rockwell, Porter-Cable, and especially Palmgren all seem to be using Chinese factories.

So this may be a little off topic, but I'd love to hear comments about the different grinders and people's thoughts, experiences with the different brands.

Obviously, I'd love a Baldor, but starting at over $500 retail it's kind of tough to justify spending as much on the grinder as I did on the lathe. :-) And yes, I'm checking craigslist!

Kevin

--- In 7x12minilathe@..., "Kevin" <kcc-groups@> wrote:

I was sharpening some tools on my 6" Chinese (Homier) grinder today when I started to smell something a little funny but I continue working. After about 10 minutes, I notice that the grinder is getting hot so I go to get my infrared thermometer.

In the next few minutes, I watched the grinder go from 130 to over 180 degrees Fahrenheit. I turned it off.

Just to get a complete picture I took off the wheels and turned the grinder on with no load. Within 5 minutes, the temperature was over 200 degrees. This is where I chickened out and reached to turn it off, but I saw a wisp of smoke coming from the grinder.

This grinder cannot have more than a few hours on it at most. I only purchased it about 2 years ago and it's ground maybe a dozen lathe tools.

It was cheap so I don't mind the money so much, but the thought if this had been a motor on a band saw or other tool that is more automated, the resulting fire would be very bad.

So one more example of being careful of the ratings on the Chinese motors.


Kevin


Re: Moments of Terror in Machining

 

I have a cheap one I got from Cummins Tools back when they'd drive
a couple of semi trucks to various places. I can sharpen a HSS bit
on it but it doesn't hold its speed very well.

My neighbor has a Delta that won't slow down unless you shut it off,
I imagine a heavy enough piece of steel will slow it down but not that
I've found yet.

At the day job we have one (dunno what brand) that runs on 480 3 phase
and has a build in dust collector. I don't imagine you can easily slow
that one down.

As far as balance and things like that, the only problem my cheap one
has is cheap wheels. Until I built a vibrating table for doing ceramic
mold stuff, when I poured a mold I'd start the grinder and put the mold
on the motor to bust up the air bubbles. It got alot better after I
dressed the wheels.




On Thu, 6 Oct 2011, Kevin wrote:

And to follow up. I did some research since I'm now in the market for a new grinder :-)

Is Baldor the ONLY company not sourcing their grinders from China or Taiwan?

I know Craftsman, DeWalt (B&D), and the others have moved production overseas, but I was surprised that Delta, Rockwell, Porter-Cable, and especially Palmgren all seem to be using Chinese factories.

So this may be a little off topic, but I'd love to hear comments about the different grinders and people's thoughts, experiences with the different brands.

Obviously, I'd love a Baldor, but starting at over $500 retail it's kind of tough to justify spending as much on the grinder as I did on the lathe. :-) And yes, I'm checking craigslist!

Kevin

--- In 7x12minilathe@..., "Kevin" <kcc-groups@...> wrote:

I was sharpening some tools on my 6" Chinese (Homier) grinder today when I started to smell something a little funny but I continue working. After about 10 minutes, I notice that the grinder is getting hot so I go to get my infrared thermometer.

In the next few minutes, I watched the grinder go from 130 to over 180 degrees Fahrenheit. I turned it off.

Just to get a complete picture I took off the wheels and turned the grinder on with no load. Within 5 minutes, the temperature was over 200 degrees. This is where I chickened out and reached to turn it off, but I saw a wisp of smoke coming from the grinder.

This grinder cannot have more than a few hours on it at most. I only purchased it about 2 years ago and it's ground maybe a dozen lathe tools.

It was cheap so I don't mind the money so much, but the thought if this had been a motor on a band saw or other tool that is more automated, the resulting fire would be very bad.

So one more example of being careful of the ratings on the Chinese motors.


Kevin



------------------------------------

Yahoo! Groups Links




Vince.
--
Michigan VHF Corp.


Re: Moments of Terror in Machining

 

I purchased a grinder from HF a long time ago when quality was an unknown word "there" (across the ocean). The grinder suffered similar symptoms, using it for 5 minutes it would get too hot to touch. I stopped using it and made a grinder from an old pump motor (C-flange) and a set of pillow block bearings mounted on a piece of channel 6" wide X 1/4" thick. This set up lasted me almost 22 years but finally had to retire it because the internal wiring, not the windings, got so brittle the insulation started to crack in several places.

I recently purchased another one from HF and I'm happy to report that I can use it for about 30 minutes before it gets too hot. They're not too much different from what my first one was, just a little better. Quality grinders cost way too much for us to justify buying one.

Frank.

--- In 7x12minilathe@..., "Kevin" <kcc-groups@...> wrote:

And to follow up. I did some research since I'm now in the market for a new grinder :-)

Is Baldor the ONLY company not sourcing their grinders from China or Taiwan?

I know Craftsman, DeWalt (B&D), and the others have moved production overseas, but I was surprised that Delta, Rockwell, Porter-Cable, and especially Palmgren all seem to be using Chinese factories.

So this may be a little off topic, but I'd love to hear comments about the different grinders and people's thoughts, experiences with the different brands.

Obviously, I'd love a Baldor, but starting at over $500 retail it's kind of tough to justify spending as much on the grinder as I did on the lathe. :-) And yes, I'm checking craigslist!

Kevin

--- In 7x12minilathe@..., "Kevin" <kcc-groups@> wrote:

I was sharpening some tools on my 6" Chinese (Homier) grinder today when I started to smell something a little funny but I continue working. After about 10 minutes, I notice that the grinder is getting hot so I go to get my infrared thermometer.

In the next few minutes, I watched the grinder go from 130 to over 180 degrees Fahrenheit. I turned it off.

Just to get a complete picture I took off the wheels and turned the grinder on with no load. Within 5 minutes, the temperature was over 200 degrees. This is where I chickened out and reached to turn it off, but I saw a wisp of smoke coming from the grinder.

This grinder cannot have more than a few hours on it at most. I only purchased it about 2 years ago and it's ground maybe a dozen lathe tools.

It was cheap so I don't mind the money so much, but the thought if this had been a motor on a band saw or other tool that is more automated, the resulting fire would be very bad.

So one more example of being careful of the ratings on the Chinese motors.


Kevin


Re: Moments of Terror in Machining

 

And to follow up. I did some research since I'm now in the market for a new grinder :-)

Is Baldor the ONLY company not sourcing their grinders from China or Taiwan?

I know Craftsman, DeWalt (B&D), and the others have moved production overseas, but I was surprised that Delta, Rockwell, Porter-Cable, and especially Palmgren all seem to be using Chinese factories.

So this may be a little off topic, but I'd love to hear comments about the different grinders and people's thoughts, experiences with the different brands.

Obviously, I'd love a Baldor, but starting at over $500 retail it's kind of tough to justify spending as much on the grinder as I did on the lathe. :-) And yes, I'm checking craigslist!

Kevin

--- In 7x12minilathe@..., "Kevin" <kcc-groups@...> wrote:

I was sharpening some tools on my 6" Chinese (Homier) grinder today when I started to smell something a little funny but I continue working. After about 10 minutes, I notice that the grinder is getting hot so I go to get my infrared thermometer.

In the next few minutes, I watched the grinder go from 130 to over 180 degrees Fahrenheit. I turned it off.

Just to get a complete picture I took off the wheels and turned the grinder on with no load. Within 5 minutes, the temperature was over 200 degrees. This is where I chickened out and reached to turn it off, but I saw a wisp of smoke coming from the grinder.

This grinder cannot have more than a few hours on it at most. I only purchased it about 2 years ago and it's ground maybe a dozen lathe tools.

It was cheap so I don't mind the money so much, but the thought if this had been a motor on a band saw or other tool that is more automated, the resulting fire would be very bad.

So one more example of being careful of the ratings on the Chinese motors.


Kevin


Moments of Terror in Machining

 

I was sharpening some tools on my 6" Chinese (Homier) grinder today when I started to smell something a little funny but I continue working. After about 10 minutes, I notice that the grinder is getting hot so I go to get my infrared thermometer.

In the next few minutes, I watched the grinder go from 130 to over 180 degrees Fahrenheit. I turned it off.

Just to get a complete picture I took off the wheels and turned the grinder on with no load. Within 5 minutes, the temperature was over 200 degrees. This is where I chickened out and reached to turn it off, but I saw a wisp of smoke coming from the grinder.

This grinder cannot have more than a few hours on it at most. I only purchased it about 2 years ago and it's ground maybe a dozen lathe tools.

It was cheap so I don't mind the money so much, but the thought if this had been a motor on a band saw or other tool that is more automated, the resulting fire would be very bad.

So one more example of being careful of the ratings on the Chinese motors.


Kevin


Re: mini lathe and non aluminum cutting

Charles J.
 

¿ªÔÆÌåÓý

I just ordered my first mini lathe (Grizzly 7x12, be here tomorrow- hope to have a bigger one 10x22 up to 14x40 or similar this time next year but this is a start), anyway...? I seen someone machine titanium fine on the exact same model Grizzly 7x12, so I know tougher metals can be done. I am just learning so I cant say anymore than I have seen it done.


Re: mini lathe and non aluminum cutting

 

¿ªÔÆÌåÓý

HF doesn't seem to have that holder in the moment.
Any feedback for that one: ?

vph


On 10/5/2011 11:08 PM, john brookes wrote:

?
and it should be mentioned how good the US (or israeli, etc) carbide is. MSC sells a brazed carbide cutoff which is good for turning and facing as well - 16$. It will last a long time between sharpenings and works very well. Another good way to go is to buy the 1/4 in insert holders from HF (15$ with 20% coupin), and buy some kennametal 2151 inserts. A 5$ insert will last maybe 3 years at hobby rates of use. They cut through hard steel like butter. The triangular inserts are tnmp as i remember - can look up. Each inserts has three cutting points that can be rotated as a point becomes dull. I have been using several for 8 months for all kinds of stuff, and I have not rotated them. I have done nasty cuts on hardened steel threads with ease.?
jb




On Oct 5, 2011, at 10:25 PM, Jerry Durand <jdurand@...> wrote:

On 10/05/2011 07:18 PM, SirJohnOfYork wrote:


Re: mini lathe and non aluminum cutting

MERTON B BAKER
 

AHA! Now I know why these toolbits, nothing special, to be sure, are
labeled "junk"! Nobody sharpens 'em and puts the right angles on 'em.
After all, It takes almost 3 minutes per tool freehand, or two minutes with
HF's expensive two table green wheel machine. (I finally bought one, when
it was on sale, & I had the money) Reground, as I said, they are nothing
special, but they work pretty well, at least the 2 sets I have do.

Mert

-----Original Message-----
From: 7x12minilathe@...
[mailto:7x12minilathe@...]On Behalf Of Chris Bailey
Sent: Thursday, October 06, 2011 7:00 AM
To: 7x12minilathe@...
Subject: Re: [7x12minilathe] Re: mini lathe and non aluminum cutting




Now hold on there. ? They're not COMPLETE trash. ?If you clean all the
muck and paint off the body of the tool, you can use the back half of the
thing for somethings. ?Cut off and discard the brazed on tip and then use
the body to mount in the OTHER side of the stock tool holder. ?Not to cut
with but to keep the top from "leaning" away from the side you're trying to
cut with. ?Had a couple of tools come loose on me before I found out about
this little trick. ?


I do agree though get rid of the brazed on tip of these things. ?They're
practically useless unless you have a tool grinder to put the correct angles
on them to cut with.?


Chris



On Wed, Oct 5, 2011 at 9:25 PM, Jerry Durand <jdurand@...>
wrote:

?
On 10/05/2011 07:18 PM, SirJohnOfYork wrote:


ATTENTION NEWBIES: If your new mini-lathe came with tools like these
get rid of them right away. Get them out of sight where you will not be
tempted to try using them ever again. They are designed to demonically
torment you and ruin any workpiece as you may be working on. They are Death.
Very Bad. Counter productive. They can visibly age you by wasting away all
of the time that you try to use them. Do not use. Avoid at any cost. Trash.
Garbage. Excrement. Waste. They'll eat up all your valuable hobby time and
leave you with nothing much to show for it. They really, really, suck.


So, do you think these would be good for say cutting tool steel on a HF
lathe straight out of the box with all that nice red grease on it??

:) :) :)


--
Jerry Durand, Durand Interstellar, Inc. www.interstellar.com
tel: +1 408 356-3886, USA toll free: 1 866 356-3886
Skype: jerrydurand


Re: mini lathe and non aluminum cutting

Chris Bailey
 

Now hold on there. ? They're not COMPLETE trash. ?If you clean all the muck and paint off the body of the tool, you can use the back half of the thing for somethings. ?Cut off and discard the brazed on tip and then use the body to mount in the OTHER side of the stock tool holder. ?Not to cut with but to keep the top from "leaning" away from the side you're trying to cut with. ?Had a couple of tools come loose on me before I found out about this little trick. ?

I do agree though get rid of the brazed on tip of these things. ?They're practically useless unless you have a tool grinder to put the correct angles on them to cut with.?

Chris


On Wed, Oct 5, 2011 at 9:25 PM, Jerry Durand <jdurand@...> wrote:
?

On 10/05/2011 07:18 PM, SirJohnOfYork wrote:


ATTENTION NEWBIES: If your new mini-lathe came with tools like these get rid of them right away. Get them out of sight where you will not be tempted to try using them ever again. They are designed to demonically torment you and ruin any workpiece as you may be working on. They are Death. Very Bad. Counter productive. They can visibly age you by wasting away all of the time that you try to use them. Do not use. Avoid at any cost. Trash. Garbage. Excrement. Waste. They'll eat up all your valuable hobby time and leave you with nothing much to show for it. They really, really, suck.

So, do you think these would be good for say cutting tool steel on a HF lathe straight out of the box with all that nice red grease on it??

:) :) :)

--
Jerry Durand, Durand Interstellar, Inc.  
tel: +1 408 356-3886, USA toll free: 1 866 356-3886
Skype:  jerrydurand