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Make motor into bench buffer? How hard?

1982fxr

Well-known member
Joined
Jan 7, 2012
Messages
9,997
Location
Phoenix
I know nothing about motors, but I'm sick of waiting for a quality 8" unit to pop up. Currently have an 8'' Ryobi that I beat on. It's junk.

Would it be worth my time trying to source a motor from somewhere and fit it with a shaft (maybe 8-10") and then some type of adapter kit so I can put a wheel on it?

Want it for aggressive 8" wire wheeling on old vises and tools, etc. Worth my time or a huge pain in the ****?

Thanks for any help
 
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Packard V8

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Joined
Mar 16, 2009
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7,380
Location
Spokane, WA
The threaded shaft adapters I've seen for 1/2" and 5/8" shafts are light duty stuff and wouldn't stand "beating on".

If what you're doing is rust removal from big lumps such as vises, consider an angle grinder with a wire wheel. Then you can use one of the threaded adapters to put wire wheels on used motors for the fine work on smaller tools.

jack vines
 

hypnolobster

Member
Joined
Sep 20, 2009
Messages
15
Location
Litchfield/Akron, OH
Sounds much more like a job for a 4 1/2" grinder and a wire cup wheel (cup wheels are a lot heavier duty than the flat wire wheels).

If you're set on a motor, we've been using an old AC Delco furnace motor with a 1/2" shaft adapter and a 6" (? or 8) wire wheel for a very, very long time. It's probably 40 years old and still gets used on every project.
I personally think a wire wheel on a motor with no guard is significantly safer than a wire wheel on a bench grinder with the traditional guard. I've had bolts get sucked into the guard in a bench grinder. I'd hate to do that with a finger.


Short answer: you probably need both, but an angle grinder is a lot easier for big parts. Bench buffer is best for small stuff like bolts and little plates, etc.
 
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Sureshot

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Jan 3, 2011
Messages
3,134
Location
Bridge Creek, OK
If you do go angle grinder don't go small and cheap as it will not last in any heavy use. Minumum 5" and Makita. Money well spent. I use a 7" Makita for wirewheeling.
 
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