8" wheel at 2800 rpm on a standard bench grinder gives 5,900 surface feet / min.
Cubic Boron Nitride is 2 to 3 times harder than Silicon Carbide and half as hard as diamond.
It's very chemically stable at high temperature. Fine to 1200C even more and that is much higher than for diamond.
The upshot is that CBN can be used for high speed grinding at surface speeds between 6 and 12 thousand SFM. So no worries at all about running a CBN wheel on a standard, not slow speed, 8" bench grinder. The Axminster wheel is labelled 100 to 3500 rpm so notwithstanding all the preamble, supplier also says it's fine on a standard grinder (2 pole motor, 2,800 to 3,000 rpm).
CBN isn't durable enough for sharpening tungsten carbide - it will cut it but the wear rate is too high. For TC you need a green grit wheel or diamond.
CBN is ideal for HSS and other hard alloys. Perfect for modern chisels and should be ideal for HSS drill bits and old style HSS engineering lathe tools.
Don't clog it up with non ferrous or mild steels.
Generally turners use CBN wheels dry because heat isn't really a problem. If you must use a lube / coolant, it's interesting that at high temperatures, water chemically affects the oxide that naturally forms on the surface of boron crystals. It might be wise to do some reading before putting CBN, water and hot metal together.
I got mine for sharpening turning chisels. It's a coarse 80 grit and absolutely eats steel. Great for (re)shaping as it does all the grunt so quickly and with so little effort. Takes a light touch. 120g is the recommended wheel for finishing but the finish off the 80g needs very little done to it. It's not like off an 80 grit belt. If I reground a blade on the 80g, I'd only take the very edge to a finer stone or paper.