pe2dave
Established Member
New 5" ROS, advice seems to be to use a padsaver?
Any buying advice / experience please
Any buying advice / experience please
I have come across this on my metabo as well where the stock pad causes the edges to round over slightly. How can one avoid or minimize this?I used a mirka one from rest express. My sander is 150mm but they list a few options.
https://restexpress.co.uk/View/22170/mirka-pad-saver-disc
The only thing that I would warn against is the slight softness to it which has the potential to round edges. That actual pad on my sander is the same, the saver itself doesn't cause this.
I’m not following Ollie, what have paint shops got to do with padsaver please?Go to a car paint or automotive tool supplier they will likely have some. Try Morrells too.
To avoid worrying about the holes start using abranet, you wont go back, also the Morrels brand abranet is cheaper and still made by mirka.
Ollie
My biggest issue with Abranet is that the grits are coarser than others that I’ve tried ie P120 abranet is more like a P80 with other abrasives, so it ends up being one more thing to have to think about, which is never a good idea in a busy workflow. Secondly the hook and loop on abranet really doesn’t play nicely with the Festool sanding pads - you need to use an interface pad, which brings other niggles... And I find it to be a bit delicate around the edges as well....petermillard
I agree about the edge rounding with the padsaver and dont really use one often.
There are some who dissagree with sanding at all, stating a planed finish superior and muttering about microbevels, they would burn us all at the stake.
I do like the abranet though, What is your preference instead?
Ollie
For 150 grit and below, I would recommend the disks below. They are made of carbide and though cost a bit they will outlast anything else to the same value you can find in my experience. Once you go above 150gr then Abranet or Autonet will do you proud. Doesn't matter which you get. Most of the time I use Auto net as it goes to a high grit than Abranet that I can get around my way. If you want pm me and I will send you a few to try, they are hook and loop - the mirka stuff, the dura-grit i stand by charlton heston - cold dead hands
https://duragrit.com/DuraDisc-Carbide-Sanding-Disc.html
My biggest issue with Abranet is that the grits are coarser than others that I’ve tried ie P120 abranet is more like a P80 with other abrasives, so it ends up being one more thing to have to think about, which is never a good idea in a busy workflow. Secondly the hook and loop on abranet really doesn’t play nicely with the Festool sanding pads - you need to use an interface pad, which brings other niggles... And I find it to be a bit delicate around the edges as well.
I used Granat for years, recently tried some 877 from AmicusUK which is good but awkward to get hold of. Currently have some of the Trend’s new range of abrasives to try out; works very nicely, especially the mesh, which is washable. Also very tough backing material, and excellent hook & loop.
Sorry, I should have been clearer; Festool have their own hook & loop (of course they do...) and Abranet doesn’t work well with it. Other brands work just fine, so I’d have to presume that Mirka chose not to support Festool with Abranet. So, six of one, half-dozen of the other....Thanks for the hook and loop info (unless that is just a Festool issue?)
Bit like a Tesco hypermarket - too many b... options!
Tks Peter.
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