Hi all,
I'm a new member, entirely due to this thread.
I started out with $200 in birthday money for a plunge router (in between jobs right now, so money is a little tight), but the router I wanted was not to be found for my budget. I decided to concentrate on my other needs: spindle sander, bench grinder, bench buffer. I settled on a Ridgid spindle/belt sander, a Porter-Cable 8" variable speed grinder and a Central Machinery 6" buffer. Couldn't afford all three new, so I hit Craigslist.
Sander I got for $80. $110 remaining.
Buffer I got from HF for $34, $76 remaining.
Now stuck - couldn't find the PC grinder.
While researching alternatives, came across this thread and the light broke through the clouds. I love old quality tools and I could probably find a block grinder for a good price. I looked around Boston, CT, RI, NH, VT and ME and found a number of block grinders. I was able to score two within 2 days.
Listed in NH, drove 1:15 each way to get it. Nice guy, sad/interesting story.
Craftsman 397.19521 - 7" - 1/2HP - 5.5A
Asking $200, got it for $80
I realized that a block grinder could be set up as a buffer, so I returned the HF buffer and looked around CL some more.
Craftsman Commercial 397.19670 - 8" - 3/4HP - 5.0A
Asking $50, got it for $30
Just for grins, I looked around CL some more in a bunch of different cities, and most times, there were no block grinders listed. Final total: $160 with room for a CM sharpening attachment for $20. I think I got very lucky.
Sorry about the long-winded story. I have a bunch of questions, but I'll start with one.
My current plan is to use the 7" as a grinder, and 8" as a buffer. Since the 7" is complete it's the easiest choice and it will also keep the SFPM down a bit (6322) for sharpening. The 8" I'll set up as a wire wheel on the left and a buffer with a taper attachment on the right. This will give me 7226 SFPM for buffing and more HP.
What do you think? Any advice about which grinder for which job?
John