Anyone ever make their own stroke sander?If so can you share pictures and
pros/cons? I need to sand a lot of 8by8s, 12' long and commercial sanders
are only 6" belts, 8 to 10' beds, and you can't slide the pieces from the
ends.
I'm thinking of roller stands for the infeed/outfeed tables to ease the
process( timbers are about 150# each).
I prefer a stroke type to control the pressure of the sanding as opposed to
a drum type where you crank it down and pray.
Thanks for any ideas.
--
Jay Miller
Temtronic Designs Inc.
http://home.cogeco.ca/~temtronic/homepage.htm
"j.b. miller" <[email protected]> wrote in message
news:[email protected]...
> Anyone ever make their own stroke sander?If so can you share pictures and
> pros/cons? I need to sand a lot of 8by8s, 12' long and commercial sanders
> are only 6" belts, 8 to 10' beds, and you can't slide the pieces from the
> ends.
> I'm thinking of roller stands for the infeed/outfeed tables to ease the
> process( timbers are about 150# each).
> I prefer a stroke type to control the pressure of the sanding as opposed
> to
> a drum type where you crank it down and pray.
>
> Thanks for any ideas.
>
> --
> Jay Miller
> Temtronic Designs Inc.
> http://home.cogeco.ca/~temtronic/homepage.htm
>
>
Andy marlow had a design but that was several years ago .
There were two posted here in the very recent past, so a google
groups search should turn them up.
j.b. miller wrote:
> Anyone ever make their own stroke sander?If so can you share pictures and
> pros/cons? I need to sand a lot of 8by8s, 12' long and commercial sanders
> are only 6" belts, 8 to 10' beds, and you can't slide the pieces from the
> ends.
> I'm thinking of roller stands for the infeed/outfeed tables to ease the
> process( timbers are about 150# each).
> I prefer a stroke type to control the pressure of the sanding as opposed to
> a drum type where you crank it down and pray.
>
> Thanks for any ideas.
>