If you are using
an angle grinder on difficult, sticky
floors and it is slowing down so much
that you smell the motor burning
do not stop the grinder or it
will burn out!
The motors are
very powerful , but they
generate a lot of heat.
They have a
strong fan inside that sucks air in
around the back handle and blows it out
the front of the grinder to keep the
motor cool.
Do
this instead..
If it smells like
it is too hot, immediately lift the
grinder off the floor or move it to an
area where it can spin freely again
which will allow the fan to pass cool
air through the grinder and cool it
down. This will only take about 20
seconds.
Angle grinders are
OK used to their capacity which
naturally slows
them down a bit, but try not to slow them too much.
What slowing the grinder does
On very sticky
materials the friction from the disc
melting the product on the floor can
cause the grinder to work so hard that
it slows down to half its speed.
The extra load
pulls more current through the windings
and causes them to heat up and it slows
down the fan that is meant to keep them
cool.
Result - a double
whammy of heat!
... but still some
cooling.
Stopping the
grinder at that time removes all cooling
so that the temperature rises and ruins
the motor wiring. Result - new grinder.
Grinders can take a lot of punishment
Experience has
shown that grinders can get very hot
many times without problems if they are
cooled again quickly in the manner
described above.
But why work on
the edge of disaster? If the grinder is
slowing down strongly on sticky material
just take smaller bites into the
coating.
No other grinder
using the same power source will do it
faster so it is just going to take
longer and that type of grinding
situation is not very common, it only
happens to some contractors very
occasionally.
PCD
Scraper Discs can stop the slowdown
If it is a more
frequent occurrence there may be a
better way to tackle it which is with a
PCD scraper disc fitted to the angle
grinder instead of the diamond grinding
cupwheel.
The coating or glue is
scraped away instead of being ground.
They can be very fast and will tackle
coatings of 500 to 10,000 microns thick.
Maintenance of your angle grinder
Some periodic
maintenance is require although you will
be surprised at just how long it can
keep working without any.
The difficult part
is explaining how long it will take to
wear.
A guess would be
maintenance once per year when it is
used three or four times a
week for 2 hrs each time.
There are only two
things to keep an eye on.
First is the
brushes. They wear very slowly, even in
a concrete dust environment and you can
check them by first disconnecting the
power.
Next remove the
small panel at each side of the grinder
near the trigger-switch handle and
remove the carbon brushes that are
connected to a spring.
Check your grinder manual for more
information.
The second thing
to check is wear of the front bearing.
They both seem to wear at about the same
time so if you replace one, also do the
other.
To check bearing
wear, disconnect the power, turn the
grinder over and try to wobble the
diamond disc on the shaft. There is no
wobble on a new grinder.
If you can feel a
definite wobble take it to a power tool
shop and have the bearing replaced. If
you let it go for too long the gears
will wear.
Many contractors
figure that if it has done that much
work without any trouble it may be
better to just replace the whole grinder
- they are very low cost compared to the
amazing amount of work they do.
To go to the next
page "Segments
- hard or soft?"
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"Power Into Speed"
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