Finally completed the other tasks that had kept me from turning some fresh material I recently acquired. Felt as though I was beginning to get back some feel for the tools by the time I'd finished roughing out , not to mention the satisfaction of being knee deep in shavings. However, my grinder has blotted it's copy book, possibly for the last time.
I'm sure many will be familiar with the cheap high speed grinders we beginners are prone to buying. Mine vibrated like mad from new. Eventually resolved by packing (card and masking tape)to get the stones running perpendicular to the spindle, and radial adjustment to get the two stones non-concentricity reasonably well in balance.
During the last touch up of my gouges last night I noticed the vibration was back and getting worse. Power off. By the time the motor was spinning down I could tell that one of the retaining nuts was loose. A lucky escape on several fronts....
1. the stone didn't get as far as testing the wheel guard-probably wouldn't have ended well
2. I didn't need to sharpen again that session- taking off the guards to refix and rebalance the stones is a royal PITA, which would have meant a very late night or abandoning the bowl half finished, probably firewood.
It's not the first time either. Last time I used threadlock when I reassembled, but this was evidently not sufficient to withstand the combination of vibration and poor engineering. I could spend the morning reassembling the grinder, but I'd rather spend the time with my family.
Long story short I'm thinking in terms of shelling out for a proper grinder, probably with a CBN wheel. I want to spend my time woodworking, not nursing duff equipment. The grinder will be used for turning tools and regrinding the primary bevel on my bench tools at times, hence I'm thinking in terms of a slow speed grinder with a wide CBN on one side.
Under normal circumstances I'd probably watch eBay for a used Creusen, but for now I'm only interested in 'in stock' options from UK suppliers.
So I'd be very grateful if anyone can recommend what's good currently, as most of the stuff I've read so far was a couple of years old.
Many thanks
G
I'm sure many will be familiar with the cheap high speed grinders we beginners are prone to buying. Mine vibrated like mad from new. Eventually resolved by packing (card and masking tape)to get the stones running perpendicular to the spindle, and radial adjustment to get the two stones non-concentricity reasonably well in balance.
During the last touch up of my gouges last night I noticed the vibration was back and getting worse. Power off. By the time the motor was spinning down I could tell that one of the retaining nuts was loose. A lucky escape on several fronts....
1. the stone didn't get as far as testing the wheel guard-probably wouldn't have ended well
2. I didn't need to sharpen again that session- taking off the guards to refix and rebalance the stones is a royal PITA, which would have meant a very late night or abandoning the bowl half finished, probably firewood.
It's not the first time either. Last time I used threadlock when I reassembled, but this was evidently not sufficient to withstand the combination of vibration and poor engineering. I could spend the morning reassembling the grinder, but I'd rather spend the time with my family.
Long story short I'm thinking in terms of shelling out for a proper grinder, probably with a CBN wheel. I want to spend my time woodworking, not nursing duff equipment. The grinder will be used for turning tools and regrinding the primary bevel on my bench tools at times, hence I'm thinking in terms of a slow speed grinder with a wide CBN on one side.
Under normal circumstances I'd probably watch eBay for a used Creusen, but for now I'm only interested in 'in stock' options from UK suppliers.
So I'd be very grateful if anyone can recommend what's good currently, as most of the stuff I've read so far was a couple of years old.
Many thanks
G