Flapper sanding wheel

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tony

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Can anyone tell me where i can buy a flapper sanding wheel ,( if thats what they are called ) this would be for sanding scrollsaw projects of which i have yet to make. Would you say that i need one ( when i do start producing ) or do you use something else, i suppose this all depends on what you make & as yet ive no idea , cheers Tony
 
I have used the polishing shop for some metal polishing stuff. Brilliant prices and service 10/10
 
I would say no you would be far better of with a palm sander , for the first two years of making and selling craft work all I used was a cheap b and q 1/4 sheet sander you need something that will remove your pattern, pencil marks and smooth to a nice finish on a flat surface . any edges or hard to reach parts needle file and hand held small piece of sandpaper

I now have Makita palm sander 60 pound and axminster small bench belt and disk which I wouldnt be without only thing with bench sander the dust is very fine so I connect to my dust extractor or you could attach to vac.

unless you can guarantee every straight , curved and internal cut is spot on but I confess I have to fettle my work on occasions some maybe more experienced may not have too , but you will need to make the surfaces nice and smooth and I cant see a flap wheel sander doing that for you.

mark
 
Thanks for all replies so far , what got me started on this, was reading Patrick spielmans book , The complete scrollsaw handbook ? In it there are referances & photos of what he calls flapper wheels but the ones on the polishing shop site dont seem to be the same , cheers T
 
Tony, do the wheels that Spielman mentions have lots of thin flaps across the width, rather than each flap being 1" or 2" wide? I have seen these mentioned on an American site but haven't seen any for sale here. I tried one of the wide ones the other day and found it to be very harsh. The ones with strips seem to be used to get rid of fuzzies and smooth out sharp corners. I'm fairly sure I have seen mention of someone making their own from emery cloth.

Which reminds me, I need some more emery cloth. I bought a pack of sandpaper from Lidl or Aldi, and it would be better used as toilet paper. :mrgreen:

Martin.
 
marcros":18m8wlgx said:
http://schuberts.co.uk/industrial-supplies/abrasive-wheels/ any use?

They are the ones I am thinking of, bottom of the page, called brush wheels. Thanks for the link.

edit: I just realised it's a Barnsley phone number, so only 20/30 minutes from here.

Martin.
 
martinka":349h43u5 said:
marcros":349h43u5 said:
http://schuberts.co.uk/industrial-supplies/abrasive-wheels/ any use?

They are the ones I am thinking of, bottom of the page, called brush wheels. Thanks for the link.

edit: I just realised it's a Barnsley phone number, so only 20/30 minutes from here.

Martin.

winner, winner chicken dinner, as they say!
 
Martin, the Spielman wheels do have lots of small strips across the width & i think i saw something on the scrollsaw workshop site for making your own, but if they are not that expensive i would buy one. They are something like the ones Marcos found, which i have not looked at the prices yet. In the book they are referred to as flutter wheels & they are mounted in a drill, if thats any help, cheers T
 
if and when you do get one, could you report back on how effective they are?
 
tony":3cu3pkol said:
Can anyone tell me where i can buy a flapper sanding wheel ,( if thats what they are called ) this would be for sanding scrollsaw projects of which i have yet to make. Would you say that i need one ( when i do start producing ) or do you use something else, i suppose this all depends on what you make & as yet ive no idea , cheers Tony

If it's what I think try looking at you tube "making a sanding mop"

I've made one and it's great for de-burring without losing shape/edges on material.

Sorry can't post link as daughter isn't here to show me how :oops:

M
 
hawkinob":16noj227 said:
Hi Martin,
I tried looking at the "making" video but had to turn it off - sea sick feeling!!!
But thanks.
Bob H.
:mrgreen: I know what you mean, but you could step through it and get the gist of it. His idea of making a template for the strips and cutting them on the scroll saw is a good one. It'll give me a use for the dozen pinned blades I got with my Jet saw.

Martin.
 
hi we use to use something like what you are talking about for denibbing between paint coats you could get different grades we use to use 240 most of the time got no idea where we got them from but they were readily available back then ( 1980's).
you may find them at paint and sand paper supplies.
pip
 
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