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polisher's question? milled aluminum finish

Discussion in 'The Hokey Ass Message Board' started by gears-n-grease, May 6, 2005.

  1. After machining,punching or any kind of processing on aluminum sheet, what is the easiest way to make the aluminum sheet have a milled finish look? timesaver? belt sander with high grit? da sander w/ high grit? I am looking for easy solution not necessarily cheap. thanks
     
  2. graverobber63
    Joined: Sep 8, 2004
    Posts: 4,134

    graverobber63
    Alliance Vendor

    Use a 'Mouse' sander with a scotchbight pad
     
  3. Deuce Rails
    Joined: Feb 1, 2002
    Posts: 2,016

    Deuce Rails
    Member

    Factory milled finishes are almost impossible to duplicate.

    For something close, use a fine abrasive impregnated disc, the ones that are supposed to be improvements over wire wheel. Use slow speeds on a hand drill. Go in one direction (which is harder than it sounds) for a milled look. It's easier to try and hit it from all sorts of random angles for tumbled finish.

    --Matt
     
  4. polisher
    Joined: Jul 28, 2002
    Posts: 651

    polisher
    Alliance Vendor

    time saver.
    That's what most mills finish sheet with.
    If they finish it at all, of course.
     
  5. 65Luck
    Joined: Apr 22, 2004
    Posts: 93

    65Luck
    Member

    When I was doing some work for a manufacturer of fire apparatus they said they used milled finish aluminum on certain areas of their trucks because the extra surface area created by the milling process was very efficient at disappating heat. They did theirs with some sort of a grinding disc.
     
  6. Winfab
    Joined: Dec 10, 2002
    Posts: 260

    Winfab
    Member

    We used a combo Scotch Brite/Emery Paper wheel (looked like the wheel pictured) in my fab shop on a die grinder at medium RPM to blend a satin/mill finish on some 6" Stainless square tube after welding. Worked well on that but doing a large area might be difficult to get a really even finish.
     
  7. polisher
    Joined: Jul 28, 2002
    Posts: 651

    polisher
    Alliance Vendor

    Powerbuffing with greaseless abrasive is pretty fast on large areas, just choose the grit you want to finish at.
    Bladder wheels are rapid, but take more skill.
    Most factory sheet stock is finished at around 180 to 240 grit with a timesaver.
    If it's any finer it's often described as bright or polished
    The grain on household equipment, hi-fi's (showing how old I am!)
    fridges, stuff like that is generally anywhere between 320 and 600, but household stuff tends to be stainless anyway.
     
  8. Deuce Rails
    Joined: Feb 1, 2002
    Posts: 2,016

    Deuce Rails
    Member

    I hate to sound dumb, polisher, but what's a timesaver?

    (By the way, anyone looking at this should ask polisher for his polishing e-mail booklet. He knows his stuff!)

    --Matt
     
  9. a timesaver is a big wet or dry sander that has an rubber belt on it , and you feed the metal through it ,feed rate and sanding depth is set by the operator, usually about 3 ft wide, for a normal job fab shop, big sanding belt standing vertical and puts a sanded finish for painting or plating or bending the finished part, giving it a cl*** A, B OR C finish depending on customer demands
    also good for taking the wrong colored paint from the metal the idiot on the paintline that cant read what to use for the right colors:rolleyes: been there;)
     
  10. looks like i'm buying a time saver. used of co****. new starts at $11k for a dry 30 inch.thanks for the input.
     
  11. polisher
    Joined: Jul 28, 2002
    Posts: 651

    polisher
    Alliance Vendor

    If you want a time saver used, you got to use ebay.
    They're on there all of the time from really big commercial units to cheaper units for smaller shops.
     

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