Provincial
Well-known member
I have always used the wheels that came on my bench grinders. I bought most of them new, Craftsman, Skil, and a couple of imports. I never paid attention to the wheels, other than to dress them and stand aside when they start up.
Last summer I bought a couple of bench grinders and a big assortment of wheels at a garage sale. The seller was downsizing and had accumulated this equipment when he ran a business in Los Angeles sharpening saw blades, mostly for carpenters that worked for the movie industry. The stones are of various widths and abrasive types because he dressed them specially for reliefs and angles for the saws.
What I have noticed from my limited experimentation with these wheels is that they cut much faster than the "consumer" grade wheels I have. As a result, I am wondering if anyone here has advice on how to choose the most effective wheels for mild steel, tool (drill) bits, and other common uses for bench grinders.
I have a green stone on one grinder for sharpening carbide tool bits, but I am not sure if it is a quality stone, as I have had it for 15 years and can't remember which mail-order source it came from. I mention this because I am at least aware that carbide requires a different stone.
Last summer I bought a couple of bench grinders and a big assortment of wheels at a garage sale. The seller was downsizing and had accumulated this equipment when he ran a business in Los Angeles sharpening saw blades, mostly for carpenters that worked for the movie industry. The stones are of various widths and abrasive types because he dressed them specially for reliefs and angles for the saws.
What I have noticed from my limited experimentation with these wheels is that they cut much faster than the "consumer" grade wheels I have. As a result, I am wondering if anyone here has advice on how to choose the most effective wheels for mild steel, tool (drill) bits, and other common uses for bench grinders.
I have a green stone on one grinder for sharpening carbide tool bits, but I am not sure if it is a quality stone, as I have had it for 15 years and can't remember which mail-order source it came from. I mention this because I am at least aware that carbide requires a different stone.

