RoninB4
Well-known member
The Foredom moto-tool was about all you'd find in mold/die shops (besides pneumatic pencil grinders) during the 80's for mold polishing or fine detail work. Small, maneuverable, and no air hose to wrestle with at a polishing bench. The only trouble was the flexible shaft would break under prolonged, industrial use. One shop I worked at had done everything they knew to prolong the working life of the cable, with no real improvement. Foredom may/may not have made an improvement, haven't used one on a daily basis since the 80's. They're probably quite well suited for the average consumer or light/occasional industrial duty but, unless something has changed, I always consider any flexible shaft to be a disposable component. If you don't kink/bend the shaft during operation they'd stand a chance of lasting as long as a speedo/tach cable. JMO
The Dremel sized electric moto-tools aren't capable of being used for polishing with diamond paste on a felt bob, the slop in the spindle allows bounce and leave a horrible rippled surface. Yeah, you can fake a polish on a small surface with the rubberized abrasives but the "waves" show on larger surfaces. Larger electric die grinders are just too bulky for intricate work and often don't have the RPM needed. Pneumatic pencil grinders do have the RPM, are maneuverable for detail work, and can polish to a mirror surface finish. But wrestling with the air hose and listening to the whine of a pneumatic all day demands hearing protection.
There may be other devices out there, never tried the dental class tools, but there's nothing I've seen/encountered that's within the price range of the average consumer that does everything I need it to.
The Dremel sized electric moto-tools aren't capable of being used for polishing with diamond paste on a felt bob, the slop in the spindle allows bounce and leave a horrible rippled surface. Yeah, you can fake a polish on a small surface with the rubberized abrasives but the "waves" show on larger surfaces. Larger electric die grinders are just too bulky for intricate work and often don't have the RPM needed. Pneumatic pencil grinders do have the RPM, are maneuverable for detail work, and can polish to a mirror surface finish. But wrestling with the air hose and listening to the whine of a pneumatic all day demands hearing protection.
There may be other devices out there, never tried the dental class tools, but there's nothing I've seen/encountered that's within the price range of the average consumer that does everything I need it to.
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