The Ashland tools I've seen were good Made-In-USA homeowner quality, but not industrial quality.
jack vines
Help anybody ever had to replace there wheel and what do you do?
Yes, the wheels are EXTREMELY hard to find. Where do you obtain them??? Thanks for ending my search ... Home Depot (no); Tool Shack (no) etc., etc. etc.Hey! I have that same grinder! I think - model 1782.
My brother and I each got one as presents on Christmas from Dad about 30+ years ago.
I use it every week, more often than my other grinders - 1/3hp Dayton from Grainger 2LKR6 and a sturdy old Craftsman 1/3hp grinder, a $20 CraigsList buy.
I use it as a wire wheeler for cleaning parts, so it gets a lot more use than the grinders /buffers.
It is a little down on power (making it a safe wire wheeler, bogs down more than it flings parts across the shop!) and has a 7/16" arbor (hard to find wheels).
I think it's a good light duty grinder - $5 - $7, based on what is available on CL in SE Michigan.
I'm having an issue with my unit. When I turn on power it just "HUMS" and won't spin. Nothing is stuck and if I try to spin it during the Power ON phase it spins a bit then gradually stops. Could I possibly need new brushes ??
I just joined this thread because I've also been trying to replace the wheels on my little Ashland grinder. I saw someone "adapted" larger holes to the 7/16" holes with a sleeve but I want to get the right size for the unit. Is there any place to buy replacement wheels that are the right wheel size (5") and shaft hole size (7/16")? Please advise. Thanks!