Angle grinder discs, mainly for polishing with minimum of material removal

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TRITON

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I've an axe head i want to polish, and ive watched on youtube plenty doing such using coloured abrasive discs, rather than something that goes on a rubber backing plate, the new style so to speak.
But not really being a metal finisher I've no idea what I should be buying.

Suggestions - or actual links so I can see what youre referring to.

Cheers all :D

Oh I should say the axe head is completely free of rust. Its an old Elwell ex military one, so looked after, and though ive a bit of filing to do at the back of the head where someones used a hammer, its very clean. Certainly has a nice patina on it, but thats not what im after.
 
Interesting, presumably there are cheaper alternatives as 15 quid seems expensive.
Do you load them with compound?

I have a few worn flap discs which I presume would do the same job with some Autosol.
Love to hear some thoughts.

Tom
 
You can get various grades of scotchbrite discs for an angle grinder, should do what you want. Or if you have a well worn in wire wheel on a bench grinder then try that, lubricating the metal with diesel or wd 40, that should give a nice soft shine.
 
Daft idea? I polished and finished off the edge on an axe using 120, 180 grit paper on a random orbital?
Polished, rather than ground the material, if that's what you want.
 
Interesting, presumably there are cheaper alternatives as 15 quid seems expensive.
Do you load them with compound?

I have a few worn flap discs which I presume would do the same job with some Autosol.
Love to hear some thoughts.

Tom
you don't load them, they are prepreg. they come in different "grits" and are far less harsh than flap wheels.
they won't polish fully, for that you need a mop and compound.
 
lubricating the metal with diesel or wd 40, that should give a nice soft shine.
And coat the walls and ceiling with the residue :LOL:

I'd avoid a wire brish, besides its polishing im wanting to do, wire is all about rust or finish removal. So something like the scotchbite
Last thing I want is cut into the metal where it leaves scoring marks
 
My lad has just done a brilliant job on a heavy knife blade with a well worn 120 grit flap disc.

He is the most ham fisted person I've ever met and I gave him some scrap to practice on first to make sure he had a chance of not getting serious digs. I wouldn't have thought an axe would need to be polished any finer.
 
I wouldn't have thought an axe would need to be polished any finer.
You're right of course, but i fancy maybe doing some more decorative aspects and polishing the patina out is a way to start.
That said, I have noticed axe heads on competition axes are polished. Maybe not to the finest of grits, but the lack of friction in these instances would probably be recognized
 
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And coat the walls and ceiling with the residue :LOL:

I'd avoid a wire brish, besides its polishing im wanting to do, wire is all about rust or finish removal. So something like the scotchbite
Last thing I want is cut into the metal where it leaves scoring marks
The whole point is as I said to use a wire wheel that's well worn in. I have an old bean tin of diesel and a brush next to mine. A quick wipe over the metal and into the wheel. Doesn't leave marks but produces a nice soft shine, and if you just wipe it over then it doesn't go everywhere. Works really well on steel or stainless, ideal for parts that aren't going to be finished like chucks and so forth.
 
As Novocaine says, experiment with those new fangled "unitised" discs from 3M or Norton do them as well in orange (blaze), blue and black.
Pricey but seem to be good. Variants cover paint stripping, derusting, pre and post weld prep through to getting a high polish.
You can buy unbranded equivalents and get adapters to fit 3M 2 and 3 inch Roloc discs to an angle grinder.
 
Flap disc for angle grinder, I like the zirconium ones (blue). 60,80 and 120 grit. I use a Hatchet for carving. When I buy an old head (something I do too much) I use the flap wheels to quickly shape the edge and clean it up, just don’t linger on the edge when you are getting sharp. Keep it moving and it doesn't heat it up. You can also take the normal mushroom abuse from the back of the head off. We are talking minutes, not hours.

Polished edges? Oh yes, honestly I could shave with my carving axes, but you have to decide what work you want the edge do. Angles and shape are very important.Rust also takes longer to get hold when polished and it is easier to clean after use.

God I love axes, does it show…..😳
 

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