robo_hippy
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Another vote for Vince's blue discs. They cut longer and faster than any other disc I have used. Maybe not best price, but best value for sure.
As for the mystery scratches, well, even I, after 20 years of turning and thousands of bowls, some times have to go back and sand some more... Good lighting and good glasses, if you need them, are essential. Some one on this forum said "Never take a finished piece from the shop into the house on a sunny day. Sunlight causes scratches." True, but mostly it is because our eyes evolved to see in natural sun light and most shop lighting is not in natural spectrums.
Sand with both your drill and lathe in low speed range. I keep my slow speed drill at half speed, and my lathe at 50 rpm max. Abrasives cut better at slow speeds because they have a chance to dig in and cut, where at high speeds you are spinning your wheels but not going/cutting very fast. I spend more time with grits up to 120 or so, than I do with grits over that. The coarser grits are for smoothing things out and removing light tear out. The higher grits are for removing scratches from the lower grits. If I start at 80, then I go to 100, and 120, and 150, and 180. According to most, I can skip some grits in there, but I think it saves time. If I see a scratch that needs to be sanded out, it is faster to sand out 80 grit scratches with 100 grit than it is with 120 grit, and yes, that includes time spent with the extra grit in the rotation. I try to use different parts of the pad so I can get contrasting sanding scratches/arcs. So, on the outside of the bowl, with one grit I sand with the upper part of the pad, and with the next grit I sand with the lower part of the pad. I wipe the surface down with my hand, and the sanding dust will work into the scratches of the lower grit and high light them. This works better with higher grits than with lower grits... In the inside of the bowl, I tend to sand with the sides of the pad so I get scratches like this ( on one edge, and like this ) with the other side. Generally I sand till I think I have all the scratches out, and then hit it one more time. I do use a firm/hard pad on grits up to 180 or 220. I use a medium pad on grits up to 400. If I go over that, then I use a soft pad.
robo hippy
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