Bb

"Bill"

08/03/2005 11:43 AM

Burning with my sander?

I have a 12" delta table top disc sander with some very rough sandpaper on
it. I bought it from a friend when he moved.

I really like it for rough sanding, but quite often it burns the wood. How
do I eliminate this?

Bill
voice 401 849 1905 x11
Fax 401 848 7540
[email protected]


This email may contain confidential information and/or copyright
material. This email is intended for the use of the addressee only.
Any unauthorized use may be unlawful. If you receive this email by
mistake, please advise the sender immediately by using the reply
facility in your email software. You should be aware that the
contents of this email may be monitored to ensure compliance with
the Meggitt IT user policy.


This topic has 4 replies

DB

Duane Bozarth

in reply to "Bill" on 08/03/2005 11:43 AM

08/03/2005 11:08 AM

Bill wrote:
>
> I have a 12" delta table top disc sander with some very rough sandpaper on
> it. I bought it from a friend when he moved.
>
> I really like it for rough sanding, but quite often it burns the wood. How
> do I eliminate this?

Less pressure and move the working surface of contact more rapidly.
Some woods (particularly harder species such as cherry and maple) are
notoriously easy to burn.

DB

Duane Bozarth

in reply to "Bill" on 08/03/2005 11:43 AM

09/03/2005 11:25 AM

If possible, slowing the rotational speed can also help...

md

mac davis

in reply to "Bill" on 08/03/2005 11:43 AM

09/03/2005 8:32 AM

On Tue, 8 Mar 2005 11:43:41 -0500, "Bill" <[email protected]> wrote:

>I have a 12" delta table top disc sander with some very rough sandpaper on
>it. I bought it from a friend when he moved.
>
>I really like it for rough sanding, but quite often it burns the wood. How
>do I eliminate this?
>
>Bill

Fresh sand paper, low pressure, short "pressure periods" and an abrasive cleaner
block to keep the paper clean..

Most burning on a disk sander (and most folks burn wood at first on one) is
caused by too much pressure on the disk and clogged sandpaper... both contribute
to heat buildup..

As in all other types of sanding, use light pressure against the disk.. let the
paper do the work..


mac

Please remove splinters before emailing

Nw

"NorthIdahoWWer"

in reply to "Bill" on 08/03/2005 11:43 AM

08/03/2005 11:38 AM

Sand for just a few seconds, back the wood off to let it cool for another
few seconds, repeat.
This is especially helpful on end grain.

Will



You’ve reached the end of replies