Members Chef niloc Posted July 19, 2024 Members Report Posted July 19, 2024 Hii i want to make a bench burnisher like the cobra MP one out of a bench buffer. I found a sight ( thanks to a search here) that has the grooved wooden attachment, but does anyone know what the correct attachment ( and possibly where to get ) to fit the sanding drums to the other side? Looks like one would need a rubber drum or contact wheel of some sorts with a half-inch arbor hole? But I could be completely wrong Quote
Members TomE Posted July 19, 2024 Members Report Posted July 19, 2024 (edited) McMaster-Carr has sanding drums and sleeves. https://www.mcmaster.com/products/sanding-drums/ One thing I like about the Cobra burnisher is the ability to adjust the speed. Need to control friction-heat to get a good result. The right amount of water and saddle soap on the edge is important, and I run the burnisher at about half speed. I usually finish the edge by hand with canvas and a burnishing gum or solution. Also, the wooden burnisher on the MP has that wide flat section that I use often for multiple layers of leather straps. Edited July 19, 2024 by TomE Quote
Members Chef niloc Posted July 19, 2024 Author Members Report Posted July 19, 2024 Thanks Tom didn’t think about the variable speed aspect as I currently is a drill press which has variable speed the extra buffer I have laying around doesn’t. By the time you buy the attachments looks the the cobra is running about $300 or so more to have a dedicated machine certainly works considering Quote
CdK Posted July 23, 2024 Report Posted July 23, 2024 (edited) @Chef niloc This is what I did, started out with a low speed grinder from Amazon, $80 & sanding drum kit from Harbor Freight, $18. I turned a screw on arbor for the RH thread and pressed this into a block of cherry. I then turned the wood to add the grooves. I rotated the grinder body 180* so the rotation is away from me. Edited July 23, 2024 by CdK Quote
Members Tigweldor Posted Friday at 12:52 PM Members Report Posted Friday at 12:52 PM Hi, What shaft size are these Harbour Freight sanding drums made for ? Thanks in advance Hans Quote
Members Tigweldor Posted Friday at 05:03 PM Members Report Posted Friday at 05:03 PM Well, answered my own question at home - says it right on the Motor : 1/2 inch - couldn´t see that on my phone display - the monitor of my home computer has better image / more pixels. Quote
kgg Posted Friday at 05:28 PM Report Posted Friday at 05:28 PM Just to add another twist to the conversion. If hardness of the burnish wheel is an important factor what would the drawback or pro's to using a metal burnishing wheel with machines grooves like the wooden ones??? Steel, Aluminum, Brass kgg Quote
Members Tigweldor Posted Friday at 06:31 PM Members Report Posted Friday at 06:31 PM (edited) I guess, that hardness is not all that important - unless it comes to different kinds of wood. Glass is harder than steel - else you couldn´t clean your Ceran stove top with steel wool and methyl alcohol without leaving a single scratch. On the other hand, I haven´t seen any glass burnishing wheels being available commercially - some people in this here forum suggest spark plugs - the corpus of them is ceramic - I don´t know if that is harder than glass - gotta check into that. Since I don´t like to fart around but rather get right into it - I have ordered one of these brass burnishers from Chinesistan - as well as some hand burnishers made from some dark indescript Asian hardwood - didn´t cost much - I will use/try these in my flexible shaft grinder. I ordered a round chunk of maple as well - let my bud do some work in return for all the welding I´ve done for him free of charge. They do say that one hand is to wash another - so far he seems to be a "no armed bandit" in that game (grin) Any method sure beats having to burnish the edges of a belt by hand with a canvas rag with the old "jerk off motion" - not at the price I am charging for my merchandise. As the Chinese have stashes for their merchandise all over Europe, I expect quick delivery - the one thing a body sure as heck can not do, is knock their prices. And I will say one thing that is sure as horse dung : if they completely close shop and play a hard game in this trade tariff war - the rest of the world is f....ed. You wouldn ´t be able to buy a single ball bearing or a seal - all has been outsourced mainly to Chinesistan and the few remaining US Timken plants would have to deliver to the army and not to civilians any more. Just take a look at say Timken bearings for your Harley swingarm - on the package it says - made in the USA - on the bearing it says made in China or made in India - and they both are part of the BRIC (= Brazil, Russia, India, China) But : since talking politics on a forum is generally bad news - so I´ll quit right now and hope we all get along peacefully. Greetings Hans Edited Friday at 07:06 PM by Tigweldor Quote
Members Dwight Posted Saturday at 04:06 PM Members Report Posted Saturday at 04:06 PM 21 hours ago, Tigweldor said: I guess, that hardness is not all that important - unless it comes to different kinds of wood. My setup is not as "pretty" as is many others . . . but it does the job. Took a piece of oak I had laying around . . . made sure that even though the grain is big . . . it was solid . . . no "splintery" trash on it. Semi rounded it out on my disc sander Drilled a hole in it to match the shaft of my little rusty old 1450 rpm motor . . . then slotted that hole so I could put a clamp on it . . . hold it tight to the shaft. Set up a block of wood on which to use my chisels . . . worked it down nice and straight and round. Then used the chisels to cut the grooves in it . . . gave it a good dose of solid bees wax . . . grabbed a rag and polished the wax. The two pieces of leather were just a scrap I had in the shop . . . used to test the stitches on my sewing machine. Hit the edge with a edger . . . put it in the groove closest to the motor . . . as it is the one I use for belts . . . after I dampened the edge. I didn't get fancy . . . wanted to show the basic burnishing . . . would look really nice if I had put some wax on it . . . The ruler is one of them kind that don't measure in inches . . . (lol) This has been my tool for something on to 5 years . . . had to scrap the other one . . . start switch went out on the motor . . . and shaft was different size . . . had to make a new one. May God bless, Dwight Quote
Members dikman Posted Saturday at 10:09 PM Members Report Posted Saturday at 10:09 PM There's a chap called Sam Andrews (has holster-making videos on youtube) who has an aluminium burnisher on a motor. I see no reason that brass shouldn't work too. I made mine out of hardwood, mainly because I could drill the hole for the shaft slightly undersize and then force it onto the grinder shaft and cut the thread at the same time. Quote
Recommended Posts
Join the conversation
You can post now and register later. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.
Note: Your post will require moderator approval before it will be visible.