dutchgray
Well-known member
^you know most grinders if you undo the head screws you can rotate the body to any 90° increment you wish, this is usually mentioned in the instructions but we know those never get looked at.
Ridgid. Years ago made by Metabo. Bought 2 more recently that have a slide switch on the left. Possibly made by makita? Run great. Register them and have lifetime warranty.
We have a DWE402G at work. I've been using it lately but the cord is wonky so I think it's going back under warranty for that. The paddle switch, One-touch guard and having an allen key instead of the stupid spanner to change the blade is so awesome. It's the first 4.5 that I have seen that someone has tried to address the shortcomings of a conventional 4.5 grinder. I feel safer with the quickly adjustable guard and the fact that your hand is further away from the blade with a paddle switch than the normal side switch. 11 amp motor and made in usa is just icing on the cake. It is pretty expensive for a 4.5 grinder at $110 CAD but we just got a cheap bosch on friday and it blows it completely away in power and ergonomics. I would say it is worth the premium, but I don't have the experience with them like others in this thread do.
Here's the last Ridgid Metabo I grabbed at pawn almost exactly a year ago for $40
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edit: Ridgid spec'd these with a much-longer-than-normal cord which is actually really nice. Often eliminates the need for a small extension cord. You also get the Ridgid plug with an illuminated grinder logo so no guessing in a power strip which is the grinder.
Metabo,Bosch, Makita in that order
why is the one with side switch better?Make sure you get one with the slide switch on the left side.
HA! Just got back from HF with same one / same price. I have one project in mind for it, will be done within the 90 days. As I told the clerk trying to sell me extended warranties, for $10, if it does that job, I got my money's worth!I got this one on sale for $10:
https://www.harborfreight.com/4-12-in-43-amp-angle-grinder-60625.html
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I was out using it today to get some rust off of an old bar clamp; not the heaviest use in the world, but it worked great.
I have some rust spots to grind off of a body panel, and might need to weld in a new piece of metal, so I would use it to grind the welds down.
I got some cutting wheels for it, but I don't really intend to do more than maybe square off some holes in sheet metal with it.
I'd put Fein before the Bosch or Makita, from my sample of one each. But they all seem overkill for the OPs use.
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Is it possible that Walter is made by Suhner? I think someone has mentioned this before.I think the OP picked a Milwaukee grinder. Most industrial places up here sell a Walter mini grinder. The list price is $348 Acklands-Grainger price $240
What about Suhner; maybe another overkill![]()
I'm not sure I've ever heard of Suhner, I was just commenting about grinders I've actually used. Now I kinda want to try one out....
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Go 5inch and variable speed.. consumables last much longer.
Greg
True. Do those also fit 4.5" wheels or do they have a different post or do they make you buy different gear like those small M10 grinders?
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TTBOMK 5" wheels are still 7/8" arbor. It's really just if your guard will accommodate. If I used guards LOL
The guard is to protect your body from shrapnel if you shatter a wheel. Safety glasses won't prevent major injuries if that happens.
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The guard is to protect your body from shrapnel if you shatter a wheel. Safety glasses won't prevent major injuries if that happens.
Which is why I wear a faceguard over my safety glasses when grinding.
That, and I am already blind in one eye, so if I lose the other...