[pianotech] cuddly die grinders

Terry Farrell mfarrel2 at tampabay.rr.com
Tue Oct 30 05:26:12 MDT 2012


May I suggest a local community college course in remedial english sentence construction?

I'm happy for you. Please keep your thoughts to yourself, or at least off this piano list.

Terry Farrell

On Oct 30, 2012, at 5:18 AM, Jim Henson wrote:

> The only right answer is to now your knee to the king of all creation. Your a creature, u live in a creation, there is a creator. Duh! U get it? Use more of your brain than the size of a pizza. Get it? Pizza. That's a play on food.
> 
> On Oct 27, 2012 2:52 PM, "Jim Ialeggio" <jim at grandpianosolutions.com> wrote:
> Those of you who abuse plates, that is grind off duplexes, or what have you, how do you get in close to either the struts or in tight sections without resorting to a file and bloody knuckles?
> 
> I have  4" angle grinder which does most of the damage pretty quickly. Then I often try to switch to a 1/4" die grinder, but that really doesn't cut the mustard, at least not the way I'm set up with it. The die grinder only uses "surface prep" wheels which are not aggressive enough, even the 36 grit, to take down serious metal. Any other approaches to the tight spots?  Are there tiny grinding wheels for a die grinder, as opposed to the tiny dremel cutoff wheels which are not terribly useful in this particular application either?
> 
> Jim Ialeggio
> 
> -- 
> Jim Ialeggio    
> jim at grandpianosolutions.com
> 978 425-9026
> Shirley Center, MA
> 

-------------- next part --------------
An HTML attachment was scrubbed...
URL: <https://www.moypiano.com/ptg/pianotech.php/attachments/20121030/9222eb25/attachment.htm>


More information about the pianotech mailing list

This PTG archive page provided courtesy of Moy Piano Service, LLC