RossJarvis
Established Member
What's your most used grit size for abrasives? I've a Mirka Ceros 150mm thingy and a Festool Rotex 90 wotsit. Admittedly mostly used on paintwork followed by bare wood. I've found that 120 grit is my do-it-all grade and 40 and 320 is hardly ever used. In fact I tend to find 120 is just right for most jobs. I am not particularly impressed with Festool brilliant but love abranet (particularly for hand finishing). It's a bit dispiriting finding that you can normally only buy these abrasives in 50 or 100 packs at vast cost. A lot of finishing literature for wood recommends 220-240 grit, which is probably my second most used.
I'm sure it depends a lot on what sort of work you're doing and on some jobs I've gone all the way from 40 - 320 (and very occasionally up to 24000). But why can't you just buy smaller packs of the less often used grit?, at lower cost rather than having to buy reams of stuff you're not going to use.
And before any smart Alec points it out, I'm aware that Mirka and Festool already supply the rougher grits in smaller packs (not much cheaper than the others) and some suppliers will split packs. But aside from the rant on prices, I'm also interested in whether or not 120 - 240 grits will probably be useful for most jobs and may be a more or less universal grit.
If you're one of those people who think sandpaper has no place in a wood-workshop please note that I am making a rude sign at you.......unless you are someone who can make everything with an axe!!
I'm sure it depends a lot on what sort of work you're doing and on some jobs I've gone all the way from 40 - 320 (and very occasionally up to 24000). But why can't you just buy smaller packs of the less often used grit?, at lower cost rather than having to buy reams of stuff you're not going to use.
And before any smart Alec points it out, I'm aware that Mirka and Festool already supply the rougher grits in smaller packs (not much cheaper than the others) and some suppliers will split packs. But aside from the rant on prices, I'm also interested in whether or not 120 - 240 grits will probably be useful for most jobs and may be a more or less universal grit.
If you're one of those people who think sandpaper has no place in a wood-workshop please note that I am making a rude sign at you.......unless you are someone who can make everything with an axe!!