Hi Crispin, had to come up with that idea as I could not find to buy the spring hold down plates that used to be around in the 70"s for holding non magnetic materials on a surface grinder. Thanks for watching. Regards.
Hey Dave, nice video. So good to see you posting again! I don't have a surface grinder but I have a trick that does a pretty good job, if not as good as a grinder would produce. I mount a diamond tipped core drill in the Bridgeport and use it like a shell mill to give me a flat surface. Works surprisingly well. Keep up the good work please!
Thanks for the view and comment. Your idea is fine for general use but is not suitable to make these stones. Not only is a rotary grind not realy suitable as it will leave swirls as you get if you have a steel plate Plough Ground, but also if the mill head is out of Tram, you will get a hollow surface. Regards.
@@daveticehurst4191 True Dave. A good surface finish is possible with the right speeds and feeds but nothing in the class of a surface grinder. It does get them flat enough to do a great job on chisels and plane irons. PS - my mill is always in tram, you cheeky bugger lol.
Brilliant video David. Very well presented. Precision stones would definitely be on my wish list. I know you can buy them from the US and Germany, but as you say they are very expensive, plus the shipping. Great to see your surface grinder in operation. Thanks for sharing. All the best Nobby.
Hi Dave I hope all is well, I clean my stones with small ultrasonic cleaner and dish soap. I have also seen where you can use card board and WD40, I have tried that method and it works ok, The ultrasonic cleaner is better. Cheers
Hi Randy, are your stones Ground Flat Stone ? If so they would have no oil so cleaning is easy, either solvent or soapy water. What I was asking was how to remove the oil impregnated into new stones. Until that is removed they are not suitable to be ground and made into new Flat Stones. Thanks for watching and your comment. Regards.
Good to see you back Dave, and you certainly didn't get that sun tan from being in the UK😊. Often seen these used, never seen them made so that was interesting. Guess what type of wheel is now on my shopping list, hopefully I can get one thin enough for my surface grinder. I was surprised at the cut depth of 0.015" but I guess being diamond on stone, the forces are much less than stone on steel. Cheers, Jon
Thank you for sharing your knowledge, that was very informative. Interested to know more about the longitudinal feed arrangement you have added to your grinder, I can see a couple of inductive sensors which I assume flip a relay. What’s the mechanical side to this arrangement?
Thanks for the view and questions. The longitudinal travel is done by using a 12 volt car windscreen wiper motor with a crank on the output shaft. The crank arm has various tapped holes in so that I can attach the table arm to it to achieve motion. They are spaced so that I can get stroke of 4 inches to 12 inches. The cross feed is done by a stepper motor, the sensor you saw is a hall effect type that when a magnet passes it switches. I can slide some neodymium magnets along the edge of the magnetic chuck to suit the stroke that I am using, there is one at each end. As the table reaches the end of the stroke that I have set, I slide a magnet along until the light on the sensor comes on, this will turn off the inhibit signal on the stepper driver and allow the motor to run. There is a magnet at either end of the stroke. By adjusting the pulse duration the cross feed can advance from about 10 thou per magnet to about 50 thou at both ends of the table stroke. If you would like more information and some pictures, please send me an email to the address on the video. davesozzyworkshop@gmail.com I hope this helps. Regards.
Nice work! I’ve only seen people use those flexible combs for work holding before. Can you use flood coolant to grind the stones? To reduce the dust being kicked up? I’m tempted to try this myself.
Yes you can use flood coolant. Here is a link to a much better description on how to use and make them. I saw the combs 50 Years ago at my place of work. I have tried to buy some without any luck. Thanks for watching. Regards. ruclips.net/video/DVLXsq7pi9Y/видео.html
Thanks for this BUT, Ground Flat Stone need to be used dry. New stones these days contain oil, my question was how to get the oil out. Thanks for watching. Regards.
Thanks for watching. Email me where you are and I will see what I can do. First I need to find a way to get all the oil out of the new stones. Thanks for watching. Regards.
@@daveticehurst4191 Thank you very kindly for taking the time to send me a set to Perth Western Australia. I can assure you they are excellent and have been used a few times with perfect results.
Thanks for the view. I did use a machine fixed extract nozzle when I made the next pair. I got fed up holding the hose by hand. 😊 gets tiring holding it and it also stopped me doing something else whilst it was auto grinding. Regards.
Not being the owner of a surface grinder I had to find an alternative. Lapping three stones together using the Whitworth method produced three flat stones after a couple of hours work. Made a bit of a mess though :-)
Hello Peter, I am not too convinced that what you did to your stones that they would be classed as flat stones. When you rub them on a ground steel surface, do they glide easily or do they bite and scratch the surface ? With what you did by lapping, I wonder if the crests of the grit were removed at all. My diamond will defineately have removed the peaks. Thanks for watching and your comment. Regards.
@@daveticehurst4191 Hi David. You may be right about the stone surface - I suspect that lapping the stones removes entire particals rather than planing off the peaks - rather like dressing a wheel. The stones are flat and don't dig in in the way that they did before lapping but I'm not sure that I'd describe them as gliding over the surface. thanks for your reply it was most helpful.
Good video Dave. Should you always use these dry or can you use oil? I don't have precision ground ones so I just spray mine with brake cleaner to clean them. One of the places that sells the ground stones here in the states is called 26acremaker. I have not contacted them about cost. I only know of them through other videos. I believe on Adam Booths channel. Thanks Dave.
Drop me an email with your details, see what I can come up with. I really need to find out how to remove the oil from new stones before I can comit myself. Thanks for watching and your request. Regards.
I find watching a grinder goin about its business oddly relaxing. You know these vids where they show a fireplace burning down for 8 hours? Do that with a grinder- we got a deal. I try to become a backyard wrenchmonkey, don´t have stones or a surface grinder. Just a shitty bench grinder that needs new faceplates and dressed wheels. Badly. I´ll shoot You a mail, I have a proposal in mind. Thanks for showing this, maybe I sometimes need it. Nice oilstones I´d like to have. G´day and kind regards
There is no need to dress the wheel. My wheel is some type of bonded diamond, it started off with 4 mm depth of diamond. I have made 12 sets of these stones and there is still over 2 mm left. The crisp sharp edge that you get when new, wears down to radiused corners and a slight crown in the center. As long as you pass the wheel fully over the stone you will be fine. I seem to recall when I was working that the diamond wheels we had were of the plated type and were dressed using a green grit block. Hope this helps. Thanks for watching and asking questions. Regards.
@@daveticehurst4191 well i assume higly that breakcleaner would work. When not I would go wild and use some washing soda. Then the oil would turn into a soap and could be washed away.
Hi Dave - Great video thank you! Can you recommend a diamond wheel for this process? Which grit do you like? I have a small Taft Peirce grinder. will you share your email address?
Yes and yes. Email is on the video but here it is again davesozzyworkshop@gmail.com Link to ebay wheel is www.ebay.co.uk/itm/234682927911?var=534397357029 and my size was 150 OD X 32 ID X 10 mm wide with a 4 mm thickness of diamond and 150 Grit. Comes quickly from China. Other sizes available from the same seller. Thanks for watching, hope to hear from you soon. Regards.
I've heard about grinding stones but i didn't know how to do it. So this has been massively helpful. Brilliant video 👏
Thanks for watching. So glad that I could help you out. Good luck if you try it yourself. Feel free to email me with any further questions. Regards.
Great to see you posting again Dave. Nice video - very imformative. 👍👍😊
Thanks 👍 Glad you enjoyed it. Thanks for watching.
Great Video Dave, I loved the trick of using tool makers clamps on the mag bed as a work holding method.
Hi Crispin, had to come up with that idea as I could not find to buy the spring hold down plates that used to be around in the 70"s for holding non magnetic materials on a surface grinder. Thanks for watching. Regards.
well done Dave you're a clever lad. I learn something new every time I watch your show
Thanks for the view, glad to enjoyed it. Regards.
So good to see you back - excellent video as always!
More to come. Several ideas pending/ Thanks for watching. Regards.
Excellent!
Thank you for the tutorial.
Glad you enjoyed it. Thanks for watching. Best Wishes.
Great to see you again, Dave. I've been looking for exactly this information - thqnks very much!
Glad it was helpful. Hope you can make some or get a friend to do it for you. Thanks for the view. Regards.
Hello Dave. Lovely to see a new video from you. Beautifully ground stones. Now I have a hankering for a surface grinder. 🥴👍😀
Go for it. You won't regret buying it. Thanks for watching. Regards
So, Gordon check his bags in and they say…. Mate what have you got in there? Stones ? 😂
Well done.
Hi Guy, Thanks for the view. Regards
Hey Dave, nice video. So good to see you posting again!
I don't have a surface grinder but I have a trick that does a pretty good job, if not as good as a grinder would produce. I mount a diamond tipped core drill in the Bridgeport and use it like a shell mill to give me a flat surface. Works surprisingly well.
Keep up the good work please!
Thanks for the view and comment. Your idea is fine for general use but is not suitable to make these stones. Not only is a rotary grind not realy suitable as it will leave swirls as you get if you have a steel plate Plough Ground, but also if the mill head is out of Tram, you will get a hollow surface. Regards.
@@daveticehurst4191 True Dave. A good surface finish is possible with the right speeds and feeds but nothing in the class of a surface grinder. It does get them flat enough to do a great job on chisels and plane irons.
PS - my mill is always in tram, you cheeky bugger lol.
Nice to see you Dave. Excellent video work. All the best, Mike
Glad you enjoyed it Mike. Thanks for watching. Wil you make some ? Regards.
Brilliant video David. Very well presented. Precision stones would definitely be on my wish list. I know you can buy them from the US and Germany, but as you say they are very expensive, plus the shipping. Great to see your surface grinder in operation. Thanks for sharing. All the best Nobby.
Thanks for watching Nobby. Glad you enjoyed it. Regards.
Hi Dave I hope all is well, I clean my stones with small ultrasonic cleaner and dish soap. I have also seen where you can use card board and WD40, I have tried that method and it works ok, The ultrasonic cleaner is better. Cheers
Hi Randy, are your stones Ground Flat Stone ? If so they would have no oil so cleaning is easy, either solvent or soapy water. What I was asking was how to remove the oil impregnated into new stones. Until that is removed they are not suitable to be ground and made into new Flat Stones. Thanks for watching and your comment. Regards.
Awesome video Dave, just came over from Nobby's channel, hitting the subscribe button...
Cheers...ATB....Dean
Thanks for the sub Dean. Hope you can find some useful information from my other videos. Regards.
👍 thanks for sharing. I didn't know they could be ground dry.
Thanks for the view. Just be aware of the dust in your lungs and over any nearby tools and machinery. Regards.
good video Dave
Glad you enjoyed it. Thanks for watching. Regards.
Well done.
Thank you for the view, much appreciated. Regards.
Some interesting work holding Dave. Good to see you taking some nice shallow cuts too 😉
All the best.
Andrew
Thanks 👍 Andrew, Glad you enjoyed it. Regards.
Very nice work.
Appreciate the view and the comment. Thank you. Regards.
Good to see you back Dave, and you certainly didn't get that sun tan from being in the UK😊. Often seen these used, never seen them made so that was interesting. Guess what type of wheel is now on my shopping list, hopefully I can get one thin enough for my surface grinder. I was surprised at the cut depth of 0.015" but I guess being diamond on stone, the forces are much less than stone on steel. Cheers, Jon
Hi Jon thanks for watching. Hope it gives you and idea to make yourself a pair. regards.
Thank you for sharing your knowledge, that was very informative. Interested to know more about the longitudinal feed arrangement you have added to your grinder, I can see a couple of inductive sensors which I assume flip a relay. What’s the mechanical side to this arrangement?
Thanks for the view and questions. The longitudinal travel is done by using a 12 volt car windscreen wiper motor with a crank on the output shaft. The crank arm has various tapped holes in so that I can attach the table arm to it to achieve motion. They are spaced so that I can get stroke of 4 inches to 12 inches. The cross feed is done by a stepper motor, the sensor you saw is a hall effect type that when a magnet passes it switches. I can slide some neodymium magnets along the edge of the magnetic chuck to suit the stroke that I am using, there is one at each end. As the table reaches the end of the stroke that I have set, I slide a magnet along until the light on the sensor comes on, this will turn off the inhibit signal on the stepper driver and allow the motor to run. There is a magnet at either end of the stroke. By adjusting the pulse duration the cross feed can advance from about 10 thou per magnet to about 50 thou at both ends of the table stroke. If you would like more information and some pictures, please send me an email to the address on the video. davesozzyworkshop@gmail.com
I hope this helps. Regards.
@@daveticehurst4191 very clever , thank you for explaining !
A great video Dave. I have a few of my grandfather's Red India stones. There are natural not man-made.
Thanks for watching. Regards.
Nice work! I’ve only seen people use those flexible combs for work holding before. Can you use flood coolant to grind the stones? To reduce the dust being kicked up? I’m tempted to try this myself.
Yes you can use flood coolant. Here is a link to a much better description on how to use and make them. I saw the combs 50 Years ago at my place of work. I have tried to buy some without any luck. Thanks for watching. Regards.
ruclips.net/video/DVLXsq7pi9Y/видео.html
Hi Dave I use a 50:50 mix of mineral engine oil and white spirit (used to be (paraffin).
Thanks for this BUT, Ground Flat Stone need to be used dry. New stones these days contain oil, my question was how to get the oil out. Thanks for watching. Regards.
Excellent job! When can I order a set? 🙂
Thanks for watching. Email me where you are and I will see what I can do. First I need to find a way to get all the oil out of the new stones. Thanks for watching. Regards.
@@daveticehurst4191 Thank you very kindly for taking the time to send me a set to Perth Western Australia. I can assure you they are excellent and have been used a few times with perfect results.
You could add a vacum shaped nossle made of gal so you could add a vacuum hose.
Thanks for the view. I did use a machine fixed extract nozzle when I made the next pair. I got fed up holding the hose by hand. 😊 gets tiring holding it and it also stopped me doing something else whilst it was auto grinding. Regards.
Not being the owner of a surface grinder I had to find an alternative. Lapping three stones together using the Whitworth method produced three flat stones after a couple of hours work. Made a bit of a mess though :-)
Hello Peter, I am not too convinced that what you did to your stones that they would be classed as flat stones. When you rub them on a ground steel surface, do they glide easily or do they bite and scratch the surface ? With what you did by lapping, I wonder if the crests of the grit were removed at all. My diamond will defineately have removed the peaks. Thanks for watching and your comment. Regards.
@@daveticehurst4191 Hi David. You may be right about the stone surface - I suspect that lapping the stones removes entire particals rather than planing off the peaks - rather like dressing a wheel. The stones are flat and don't dig in in the way that they did before lapping but I'm not sure that I'd describe them as gliding over the surface. thanks for your reply it was most helpful.
They're great to take off the impact dings
Hi Adam, they sure are useful. If I can find how to get the oil out, I will do you a pair. Thanks for watching. Regards.
@@daveticehurst4191 boil in caustic in a pressure cooker, ...
Or vacume pump to make the caustic penetrate.
Good video Dave. Should you always use these dry or can you use oil? I don't have precision ground ones so I just spray mine with brake cleaner to clean them. One of the places that sells the ground stones here in the states is called 26acremaker. I have not contacted them about cost. I only know of them through other videos. I believe on Adam Booths channel. Thanks Dave.
$250-280 for two stones. Not cheap but worth it.
@@Superbonker-np6iz Thanks
Hi John, thanks for the view, use DRY ONLY. Regards.
The diamond wheel cuts the stone like butter, made several myself.
Thanks for watching. Regards.
Any interest in selling these locally Dave?
Drop me an email with your details, see what I can come up with. I really need to find out how to remove the oil from new stones before I can comit myself. Thanks for watching and your request. Regards.
@@daveticehurst4191 Don't have your email mate, but I dropped you a message on Facebook.
I think I want a surface grinder, and a bigger shop to put it in😊
You can never have too many machines and tools. Good luck in finding a good condition small one, bit like hens teeth. Thanks for watching. Regards.
I find watching a grinder goin about its business oddly relaxing. You know these vids where they show a fireplace burning down for 8 hours?
Do that with a grinder- we got a deal. I try to become a backyard wrenchmonkey, don´t have stones or a surface grinder.
Just a shitty bench grinder that needs new faceplates and dressed wheels. Badly. I´ll shoot You a mail, I have a proposal in mind.
Thanks for showing this, maybe I sometimes need it. Nice oilstones I´d like to have. G´day and kind regards
Thanks for the view and your story. Regards.
how do I dress my diamond wheel
There is no need to dress the wheel. My wheel is some type of bonded diamond, it started off with 4 mm depth of diamond. I have made 12 sets of these stones and there is still over 2 mm left. The crisp sharp edge that you get when new, wears down to radiused corners and a slight crown in the center. As long as you pass the wheel fully over the stone you will be fine. I seem to recall when I was working that the diamond wheels we had were of the plated type and were dressed using a green grit block. Hope this helps. Thanks for watching and asking questions. Regards.
use a ultrasonic cleaner that is what Robrenzetti does.
Thanks for the view. I saw him doing that but I beleive he used hot water and a soap solution. I just spray them with brake cleaner. Regards.
@@daveticehurst4191 well i assume higly that breakcleaner would work. When not I would go wild and use some washing soda. Then the oil would turn into a soap and could be washed away.
Hi Dave - Great video thank you! Can you recommend a diamond wheel for this process? Which grit do you like? I have a small Taft Peirce grinder. will you share your email address?
Yes and yes. Email is on the video but here it is again davesozzyworkshop@gmail.com Link to ebay wheel is www.ebay.co.uk/itm/234682927911?var=534397357029 and my size was 150 OD X 32 ID X 10 mm wide with a 4 mm thickness of diamond and 150 Grit. Comes quickly from China. Other sizes available from the same seller. Thanks for watching, hope to hear from you soon. Regards.