Very nice Dr Mark, but I need more details. Looks like a Polar Bear forge kit. Please tell me about your build experience here; Was the quality what you expected? What you would do different? What kind of budget? What kind of motor and VFD, and where you sourced them?
10" wheel? Any other details you could give would be most appreciated! Thanks, and that is a beautiful grinder!
Polar Bear Forge GIB kit. The quality was excellent....all pieces fit perfectly. I welded the uprights, rather than bolting them. The only piece of advice I would offer that is not clear in the instructions is to use the drill press or a mill to start your taps on the pieces that need threads cut. The first hole I tapped on the multi-platen (the big wheel) I did on the work bench.....and it was angled just enough to not be perpendicular to the platen. Honestly, in all my years of shop work, I've never seen that happen, and never would've even guessed it could happen. But it did. I drilled another hole adjacent to that one and tapped it properly in the drill press....problem solved.
One other thing I did....I cut the excess piece to the right off the base so I could mount the thing flush with the edge of my table. That's so when (not if) the belt breaks, it can (hopefully) fall down, instead of bouncing off the table base and slapping me silly.
The motor and VFD I got from Wayne Coe (
www.waynecoeartistblacksmith.com). He convinced me the 1.5 hp would be more than adequate. I haven't had a chance to really hog on it yet, but I'll take his advice. He's certainly got some experience with the things....
4" drive wheel, 8" large wheel, 2" idler wheel, and yes I'm either going to fab up my own flat platen, or just order one from Jaime at Polar Bear. I bought an extra 2" idler wheel just for that. The base I built from some tubing I had laying around, and a piece of MDF/woodgrain melamine that I already had as well.
Total cost? I don't recall exactly, without searching for the receipts, but it must be around $800-900 total?? The VFD added a chunk to the set up, but I really wanted variable speed, since I'll use this for more than knife making.
The tracking is more visible in Alan C's pic than mine....see the round knob that props the upper 4" aluminum wheel? That piece is hinged and gives you tracking adjustment.... (Very nice build, Alan.)
I have a commercial quality/size glass fusing kiln that I got in a deal a few years ago. I've never even plugged it in, but soon enough it's going to be my heat treating machine! More details and pics to follow...