WhoWhatNow
Well-known member
jkuc003 - really like that belt grinder and the Stahlwille Rollmaster cart too. There is a thread dedicated to those carts somewhere on the site. Please post your pics up!
GMF 6"
I would agree. Looks like a Wisotta grinder. Nice find.
Thank you all.
I bought it exclusively because of the Blue Point name knowing that it was rebranded. At $35 I knew I couldn't go wrong. Now I need to learn about Wisotta grinders.
Brian
That looks like a very stout belt grinder attachment---I like it![]()
jkuc003 - really like that belt grinder and the Stahlwille Rollmaster cart too. There is a thread dedicated to those carts somewhere on the site. Please post your pics up!
Nice Linnishall! You guys down under have all of the good belt grinding attachments. Any input to how they compare to the PA Multitools?
http://www.trick-tools.com/Linishal...Disc-Grinder-Attachment-915-5809#.ViY0lyE-zZ4
Looks a little like the Dayton 1/3-HP in mid Michigan CL.There is very little info available on Wissota grinders, but from what I've seen they are pretty good. They made grinders for Wards, Milwaukee, Bluepoint, and Rockwell, among others. I finally bought one recently, the same as yours except red. I don't have an actual pic of mine handy, but it looks like the attached pic.
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Looks a little like the Dayton 1/3-HP in mid Michigan CL.
http://grandrapids.craigslist.org/tls/5277758177.html
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There is very little info available on Wissota grinders, but from what I've seen they are pretty good. They made grinders for Wards, Milwaukee, Bluepoint, and Rockwell, among others. I finally bought one recently, the same as yours except red. I don't have an actual pic of mine handy, but it looks like the attached pic.
I would agree. Looks like a Wisotta grinder. Nice find.
8 months ago I spent an hour on the phone with the retired CEO of Wissota. They made a very high quality grinder for many manufacturers.
Typically the ser # is the date of manufacture. The CEO was VERY proud of his grinders. I called him about the snap-on pictured here. I have NEVER been able to track this one down in any Snap-on literature but Wissota owned up to making it. They custom made every spindle themselves. This long one had two bearing in the extended arm.
Amazing grinder, Joe! I'm trying to figure out what kind of application the extended housing would serve. Great info and thanks for the s/n information! Based on the information you provided, the date of manufacture of mine would be october, 1991 (w10-91). I would guess the 'w' in the serial # is the givaway on the manufacturer. One more year, and I can officially call mine "vintage"
Brian
Any thoughts on these? Perhaps or perhaps not vintage, but seems practical? CL Ad
grinder_boy_01 by four.cycle, on Flickr
grinder_boy_02 by four.cycle, on Flickr
grinder_boy_03 by four.cycle, on Flickr
grinder_boy_04 by four.cycle, on Flickr
grinder_boy_05 by four.cycle, on FlickrA little big to fit on my bench, but as prompted I'm posting this here for giggles. Its exact origin unknown, it was used for a number of years in a local machine shop before it closed. It came to me with a 1.5 HP 3 Phase 1750 RPM Dayton motor; not having 3 Phase power, I replaced it with a 2 HP 1 Phase 220V 1750 WEG motor. I still need to re-install the belt guard (seen at the base of the grinder in the first picture).
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For $15 more, there is a 1/2 HP true CM Block grinder in the same area.Can anyone shed any light on this grinder? It's not a block grinder but it certainly looks older than the usual crop of craftsman grinder I see. Anyone know the quality? It's a bit weaker than I'm looking for.
https://houston.craigslist.org/tls/5284778606.html
Can anyone shed any light on this grinder? It's not a block grinder but it certainly looks older than the usual crop of craftsman grinder I see. Anyone know the quality? It's a bit weaker than I'm looking for.
https://houston.craigslist.org/tls/5284778606.html
I am considering this grinder for $20. Does it fit under the umbrella of Craftsman block grinders? At that price, is it worth messing with or is it missing too many parts?
Brian
Does anyone know if this started life as a grinder? It has no guards or any way to attach them.
Thought I would just keep it for wire wheels or buffing.
For the sanding drum on the left side where can you get new sand paper? Are they worth buying paper for?
It came as a package deal with my first block grinder 1/2 hp I will be posting on that thread. (Happy about that one). Plus a Cole vise, No drill with it...
No, just a universal motor with shaft adapters. A true buffer/grinder will not have open motor ends. Those drum wheels are nice though.
When I see drum wheels like that, I envision building ANOTHER belt grinder!
Why? It is nothing more than a high wrap contact wheel. Do you not have a fully exposed contact wheel belt grinder? Yeas ago on one of the blade smithing forums I was on a few guys had larger diameter wheels like that, they opened up a split and you could use shop roll abrasives on. Those looked slick for the large diameter.
grinder
Very nice job! There's a grinder like that 5 minutes from my home----is it worth all the work?
https://chicago.craigslist.org/wcl/tls/5300942759.html
From this... To this... My Resto-Mod grinder.
Here's an abco (Adams Brothers Co) I picked up at an auction about a month ago. It runs smooth, just had to clean it up a little bit. I made the base out of 1/2" plate, two different size hydraulic cylinder rams, and a few old hitch balls. I'm using it for tungsten only so I didn't see the need for a big foot print at the bottom.
Here's an abco (Adams Brothers Co) I picked up at an auction about a month ago. It runs smooth, just had to clean it up a little bit. I made the base out of 1/2" plate, two different size hydraulic cylinder rams, and a few old hitch balls. I'm using it for tungsten only so I didn't see the need for a big foot print at the bottom.

