I'm using a 7" hand angle grinder (Makita) and a Dewalt 7" cup (DW4775) on a 2400 sq-ft, 2 year old electric troweled floor in very good condition.
I wanted to get it smoother, cleaner and ready for densifier/sealer.
I asked Dewalt what the equivalent grit of this cup is, and this is their response:
"This model doesn't have a grit, this is meant to grind rough surfaces like thinset used to install tile. It will make the surface smooth but not provide any polishing of the surface."
I know very little about concrete grinding. I understand it will remove a coating on top of concrete (like thinset), but how could it not have an equivalent grit level?
When I brush my hand against the newly ground floor, it's nice and smooth. The cup is definitely grinding some concrete (I can confirm lots and lots of concrete dust being caught by the vacuum as well as escaping into the air).
I believe it is important to know what grit level I am at, for one reason, because the densifier/sealer has an optimal floor roughness level for application.
Thank you!
I wanted to get it smoother, cleaner and ready for densifier/sealer.
I asked Dewalt what the equivalent grit of this cup is, and this is their response:
"This model doesn't have a grit, this is meant to grind rough surfaces like thinset used to install tile. It will make the surface smooth but not provide any polishing of the surface."
I know very little about concrete grinding. I understand it will remove a coating on top of concrete (like thinset), but how could it not have an equivalent grit level?
When I brush my hand against the newly ground floor, it's nice and smooth. The cup is definitely grinding some concrete (I can confirm lots and lots of concrete dust being caught by the vacuum as well as escaping into the air).
I believe it is important to know what grit level I am at, for one reason, because the densifier/sealer has an optimal floor roughness level for application.
Thank you!
