Eric The Viking
Established Member
- Joined
- 19 Jan 2010
- Messages
- 6,599
- Reaction score
- 76
I've got one of these:
(Makita 9911)
Using it reminds me of that old joke: "Don't ever try to wrestle a pig into submission -- you both get filthy dirty and the pig enjoys it."
It's a horribly crude tool for most jobs, and can be relied on to ruin any flat wooden surface, usually in seconds even though I'm trying to be ultra cautious. So it gets used mostly for decorating and very-DIY woodworking. The belts clog something horrid too, and once that happens you have scrape marks as well as the inevitable deep gouges that happened when your attention lapsed for a split second.
Today, I has bin mostly having to sand an emulsioned wall (don't ask!). The belt clogged VERY fast indeed, even though the paint's been on there for at least two weeks. And the long streaky clogs mean more trouble, and waste of an expensive belt.
Now I do have one of these:
It's crepe, just like old plimsolls (if you're over a certain age), but doesn't smell as bad. You force the end into the belt and it lifts the sawdust - usually really effectively.
But it didn't want to work at all on the emulsion clogged belt, until I had the brainwave of
fitting the belt on the sander backwards,
at which point it worked superbly well, and the belt looks pretty much like new again!
I think I'm going to experiment on a couple of really sawdust-clogged belts I couldn't get completely clean before (but kept for some reason).
There are probably umpteen safety elves after me as I type, so...
... don't try that at home, down the pub, or even in the outside khazi, under any circumstances. OK?
E.
PS: I know you won't dream of trying it, but if you did you'd obviously have to use the very slowest speed, and put the belt back the right way round afterwards.
PPS: I know: "Everyone always does that, didn't you realise?" Well no, but then I'm a bit thick and now I have a smug grin, at least until the thing gouges a big groove in the wall or pulls me off the scaffold tower...
Using it reminds me of that old joke: "Don't ever try to wrestle a pig into submission -- you both get filthy dirty and the pig enjoys it."
It's a horribly crude tool for most jobs, and can be relied on to ruin any flat wooden surface, usually in seconds even though I'm trying to be ultra cautious. So it gets used mostly for decorating and very-DIY woodworking. The belts clog something horrid too, and once that happens you have scrape marks as well as the inevitable deep gouges that happened when your attention lapsed for a split second.
Today, I has bin mostly having to sand an emulsioned wall (don't ask!). The belt clogged VERY fast indeed, even though the paint's been on there for at least two weeks. And the long streaky clogs mean more trouble, and waste of an expensive belt.
Now I do have one of these:
It's crepe, just like old plimsolls (if you're over a certain age), but doesn't smell as bad. You force the end into the belt and it lifts the sawdust - usually really effectively.
But it didn't want to work at all on the emulsion clogged belt, until I had the brainwave of
fitting the belt on the sander backwards,
at which point it worked superbly well, and the belt looks pretty much like new again!
I think I'm going to experiment on a couple of really sawdust-clogged belts I couldn't get completely clean before (but kept for some reason).
There are probably umpteen safety elves after me as I type, so...
... don't try that at home, down the pub, or even in the outside khazi, under any circumstances. OK?
E.
PS: I know you won't dream of trying it, but if you did you'd obviously have to use the very slowest speed, and put the belt back the right way round afterwards.
PPS: I know: "Everyone always does that, didn't you realise?" Well no, but then I'm a bit thick and now I have a smug grin, at least until the thing gouges a big groove in the wall or pulls me off the scaffold tower...