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Just a friendly reminder that shop accidents happen. If it weren't for the guard on the grinder and a pair of safety goggles, an injury would definitely have occurred. This grinder showed no signs of fatigue. Safety problems will arise where you least anticipate them, so please always be safe!
14-01-2015 01:33
Tyler2517Its always been my rule to have a full face shield on when using any type of grinder/sander/cutoff saw. Not to stop sparks and the like but because those things blow up and when they do they don't show it sometimes and could really hurt some one.
14-01-2015 02:19
Cash4587I could be wrong, (please somebody correct me if I am) but I am pretty sure you are not supposed to grind aluminum with that type of abrasive disc. Grinding aluminum can gum those up and cause them to explode like that because it gets in the pores of the disc and causes it to expand. Then again, somebody please correct me if I am wrong.
14-01-2015 02:20
T^2I once burned a hole through one of my shirts by leaning too close to the sparks. Good times.
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I could be wrong, (please somebody correct me if I am) but I am pretty sure you are not supposed to grind aluminum with that type of abrasive disc. Grinding aluminum can gum those up and cause them to explode like that because it gets in the pores of the disc and causes it to expand. Then again, somebody please correct me if I am wrong.
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14-01-2015 02:53
asid61|
I could be wrong, (please somebody correct me if I am) but I am pretty sure you are not supposed to grind aluminum with that type of abrasive disc. Grinding aluminum can gum those up and cause them to explode like that because it gets in the pores of the disc and causes it to expand. Then again, somebody please correct me if I am wrong.
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14-01-2015 08:25
JamesCH95Speaking from experience - ALWAYS anticipate failures from angle grinders/cutters like this one. They happen routinely, and can be caused by the slightest amount of mis-use.
What was this cutter being used to cut? How experienced was the operator? What type of blade was it?
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I could be wrong, (please somebody correct me if I am) but I am pretty sure you are not supposed to grind aluminum with that type of abrasive disc. Grinding aluminum can gum those up and cause them to explode like that because it gets in the pores of the disc and causes it to expand. Then again, somebody please correct me if I am wrong.
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Its always been my rule to have a full face shield on when using any type of grinder/sander/cutoff saw. Not to stop sparks and the like but because those things blow up and when they do they don't show it sometimes and could really hurt some one.
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14-01-2015 11:01
Mike Marandola
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I could be wrong, (please somebody correct me if I am) but I am pretty sure you are not supposed to grind aluminum with that type of abrasive disc. Grinding aluminum can gum those up and cause them to explode like that because it gets in the pores of the disc and causes it to expand. Then again, somebody please correct me if I am wrong.
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14-01-2015 11:30
ms123132Safety FIRST!
I am apart of my teams manufacturing team and I do have to say that being safe while working with robots is something we take a lot of time to enforce. Always be prapared for anything catastrophic to happen because sometimes it could be life threatening! Safety SHOUT OUT FROM 195!!!
20-01-2015 12:50
brynnanotbrendaWe had an incident where we were clamping some metal to a saw and the clamp ended up punching a hole in the saw. Ironically, it's now easier to clamp. It's a very nice clean hole, had you not been there you would think it was made like that.
20-01-2015 13:35
FrankJYou have a few choices grinding Aluminum. We use a bench sander & sanding disks on our angle grinder rather than grinding. Flapper wheels work also.
1(Probably best ) use wheels rated for Aluminum.
2 Use lots of lubricant like WD-40. Never done this. I am told that it is messy.
3 Don't let the wheel load up. Which will require frequent redressing. Not the best of ideas.