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I need a better method to sand round overs on plywood than with folded-over paper.
I'm thinking sanding sponges. If so, which one?
If not, then what?
Semper fi,
Brad
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(02-02-2021, 07:41 PM)®smpr_fi_mac® Wrote: I need a better method to sand round overs on plywood than with folded-over paper.
I'm thinking sanding sponges. If so, which one?
If not, then what?
Flap sander or mop sander.
I put one in my drill press, run it at 1800 or so and it cleans up parts rapidly.
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Lee Valley makes rubber profiles that you wrap sandpaper around. Very good assortment, use mine on almost every project.
Ed
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(02-02-2021, 07:41 PM)®smpr_fi_mac® Wrote: I need a better method to sand round overs on plywood than with folded-over paper.
I'm thinking sanding sponges. If so, which one?
If not, then what?
Oldest answer is a reverse profile to hold your cloth-backed paper. As indicated, such are available as commercial products, or from your router and pine scraps.
Sponges and mops are best for three-dimensional works like carvings and complex moldings, though I generally just burnish the latter with its own variety of shaving.
Better to follow the leader than the pack. Less to step in.
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On simple radii I still use sandpaper but put a piece of foam behind it to help it follow the contour smoothly. On complex profiles I use abrasive foam pads. Flap sanders would be a good approach if you have to do a lot of linear feet. I have a shaft drive flap sander for doing moldings up to 8" wide. I think I've used it twice. I just haven't made as much molding as I thought I would when I bought it. Anyone need a W&H molder with about $3K worth of knives and a flap sander?
John
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Harbor Freight sanding sponges. Made in Korea. Pack of ten for a few bucks.
Fine, medium, and coarse.
Steve
Mo.
I miss the days of using my dinghy with a girlfriend too. Zack Butler-4/18/24
The Revos apparently are designed to clamp railroad ties and pull together horrifically prepared joints
WaterlooMark 02/9/2020
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Thanks, folks! I'll check these out.
Semper fi,
Brad
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For cove profiles for example, I'll take a small piece of the 2" rigid insulation board you can get at the box stores, adhere a piece of sandpaper to the profile of the workpiece itself, run the insulation board back and forth on it till I form the form the profile on that insulation board. Boom, you now have an exact replica sanding block. Adhere a piece of sandpaper to your newly created sanding block and there you go! Only takes a minute or two.
"This is our chance, this our lives, this is our planet we're standing on. Use your choice, use your voice, you can save our tomorrows now." - eV
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(02-02-2021, 10:02 PM)EdL Wrote: Lee Valley makes rubber profiles that you wrap sandpaper around. Very good assortment, use mine on almost every project.
Ed
Plus #1 on the profiles, there are multuple companies that sell them cheap. They will last forever.
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(02-03-2021, 04:43 PM)KLaz Wrote: For cove profiles for example, I'll take a small piece of the 2" rigid insulation board you can get at the box stores, adhere a piece of sandpaper to the profile of the workpiece itself, run the insulation board back and forth on it till I form the form the profile on that insulation board. Boom, you now have an exact replica sanding block. Adhere a piece of sandpaper to your newly created sanding block and there you go! Only takes a minute or two.
That's brilliant.