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Comes with two griding wheels - coarse 36 grit and medium 60 grit. Built-in, bright, flexible work light. Each wheel has protective spark guard and adjustable clear eye sheild. Mounting holes and rubber feet make grinder easy to mount on stand, worktable or workbench'. Conveniently placed easy to use on/off switch. Long 6 foot power cord. No load speed: 3450 RPM. Cast iron base for durability. Ball bearing construction for smooth operation. UL and CSA Listed. 3/4 HP, 5 Amp/115V/60Hz Motor; 5/8" Arbor
Customer
Reviewed in the United States on May 4, 2017
NICE BENCH GRINDER!! CHANGED OUT ONE OF THE ROCKS AND PUY A GRINDING ROCK THAT WAS MUCH, MUCH FINER. THAT IS TO PUT A FINISH ON BLADES AFTER I COURSE GRIND THEM. GRINDER IS SMOOTH AND WITH ;LITTLE IF ANY VIBRATION. WELL BUILT AND THE LIGHT IS EASY ADJUSTABLE FOR HELPING TO SEE WHAT YOU ARE DOING. THINK IT USES A 60 WATT BULB.
Gregory S. Porter
Reviewed in the United States on December 8, 2017
It has good paint and the light is cool, but I wish it was adequate build quality. The motor shaft is slightly bent at one end and so the grinding stone on that side has appreciable and unacceptable vibration. (I tested and verified it was the shaft bent rather than a stone deformation). I replaced that stone (the coarse one) with a wire wheel, which helped with vibration (less mass spinning). Also the other stone (the fine one) is really soft. I wore a groove in it the first time I used it. I have a quality Delta bench grinder I bought many years ago and so am familiar with how a bench grinder should perform. This one I bought for a cabin in the mountains and it will get minimal use. I opened it up at the cabin. If it was my main grinder I would have sent it back, but just decided to bite the bullet and make do. Would definitely not recommend.
Snowy Range jack
Reviewed in the United States on May 7, 2016
I've used grinders in the shop on the farm and ranch all my life and after years of using other grinders this is the best of all. It starts slowly but within seconds is at full speed. I mounted it on a heavy duty pedestal with little modification. It was perfectly balanced and works excellently. I replaced the left grinder wheel with a DeWalt 8" crimped bench wire wheel. The right wheel support has a slot for sharpening drill bits and it works well. The wheel change was simple but time consuming; the bolts, nuts, washers for the panel cover are very small for my fingers. The wire wheel works great. I love this grinder and would strongly recommend it. I've had it about 3 months and used it for numerous jobs without a glitch.
Judy Spiegel
Reviewed in the United States on May 26, 2016
When I removed the grinder from the box I spun the wheels by hand and saw the grinder wheels ran out (wobbled) 1/8” on the right and almost that on the left. It would be unsafe to run it this way and it would vibrate horribly. I removed the wheels and washers and saw the only thing the washer had rested against was a snap ring in a shallow groove. I messed with it for an hour and got the run out down to >1/16”. If the shaft was bigger and a step machined on it this would be a very nice grinder. Whoever designed the snap ring as a stop for the washer should go back to flipping burgers. The rest of the grinder is well constructed.
JWHSr
Reviewed in the United States on May 23, 2015
It has a slight wobble. Will try to shim to correct it. Otherwise worth the money invested.
woodworker
Reviewed in the United States on March 3, 2015
I received this grinder yesterday, so this is an early assessment. My old (cheap) grinder had given out, and I was looking for something to: use as a general purpose grinder for lawnmower blades, general metal grinding, and chisel and tool sharpening. Generally speaking, the grinding wheels that come on bench grinders aren't suited for tool sharpening, they are too coarse and the wheel tends to overheat the metal edge. I looked at specialized sharpening machines, but they are expensive and not suited for general purpose grinding, and I didn't want to buy two tools. My compromise was to buy a good quality bench grinder and get a higher quality grinding wheel for my sharpening needs. I opted for a Norton 3x blue wheel in a 100 grit. These wheels run cool and are supposed to last 3 times as long as a regular wheel. So- I had the wheel and yesterday I got the grinder. Opened the box from Amazon and there was another box inside. Opened that box and there was another box inside- suffice it to say it got here safely! Good job, Amazon.There was some assembly required; attach the spark shield, attach the particle guards, and attach the tool rests. I turned it on and was surprised at how quietly it ran, it spooled right up to speed, but it started to walk across the bench- I needed to follow the directions and fasten it down. I replaced the finer wheel with the one I bought and commenced setting up to sharpen some dull chisels. A wrench is not included. First was to fine tune the wheel to reduce the wobble- mark with pencil and place masking tape under opposite points under the flanges, it now runs pretty well but not perfectly. I then took my brand new wheel truing tool (sold separately) and took down the high spots, so the wheel runs true in circumference. Finally, time to get to the chisels. The tool rests are not particularly well designed, in fact they're kind of cheap- stamped out of a single piece of steel, one was bent and I had to use a hammer and anvil to get it in shape. The rests do not adjust for angle, they simply slide front and back. Get it close to the wheel and that's all you can do. Once the grinder was fastened down, a bulb (40 W max., not included) was put in the light, and the wheel trued up, I was able to get the sharpening done in about ten seconds per chisel.I really like this grinder, it is basically a very good tool. It has a very robust feel, a heavy gauge electrical cord, a rugged switch, generally a solid feel. I think I am going to come up with some new tool rests and throw the factory ones away, though. I like the fact that the power switch is sealed from grit and dust, and the light is on a long adjustable stalk, and is very bright and useful (it works independently of the grinder power switch). The motor is quiet, smooth and powerful. I like the fact it runs an 8" wheel because the larger size runs cooler and cuts flatter. I like that this is built ruggedly, it feels like it will last a long time. I had considered the Delta grinder with the adjustable speed feature, but I think I made the right choice with the Sunex, it seems like it is designed and built to last.One more thing- I watched a youtube video on grinders and watched how to sharpen a drill bit (hint: don't rotate the bit). I had to try it, and was pleasantly surprised at how quickly and easily it can be done. The trench in the right tool rest seems to be designed for positioning drill bits for sharpening.
Gene G
Reviewed in the United States on April 30, 2015
This is a rock solid bench grinder. The construction is well done, the paint and finish are very good. The on/off switch has a nice feel to it The light stem and socket are typical. The grinding wheels are adequate (and well balanced), I have changed one out and replaced it with a United Abrasives/SAIT 100 grit wheel, per my needs. The wheel shrouds are not cast, but are still well constructed. The unit seems to have plenty of power, it spools up quickly, runs with little or no vibration. My previous grinder (a Sears buy), I had bolted to my bench; I was eager to try this bad boy out and placed the grinder on my bench just on its 4 cushioned grips/pads. I proceeded to grind some angle iron without the grinder moving or vibrating all over the bench, it is heavy and stable enough to operate without bolting it to Terra firma, yet today it remains without the tie-downs. Unless your grinding the edge of a 4 foot piece of 6" I-beam, I doubt you would need topermanently bolt down this grinder. A best buy, recommended!Update: Grinder is doing well. I did finally bolt the grinder to my work bench; my son, grandson and others come over and use it, thought it best to secure it in one place. I think there is actually some formal regulations on shop safety that specifies it needs to be bolted.
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