steve yates
Well-Known Member
For me its the hull I’ll be sanding, but there may be a boat next to me and dont want to cover him in dust!
This is a very timely warning - I was planning to remove old varnish from my heads door this weekend using a very powerful Metabo orbital sander (as mentioned above by Poignard - I bought it from him). I shall refrain from using the P40 Abranet discs left over from stripping antifoul prior to copper coating a few months back.Be more than careful using an orbital sander on interior woodwork unless it's solid wood you can find yourself through what are very thin veneers in next to no time. Scraping is it the way to do it.
In the end I found using a carbide scraper worked admirably. Managed to get round the saloon over a few wet days on anchor in the summer.I would like to have a go at refurbishing my internal woodwork and have a long weekend to make a start BUT I need to sleep aboard over the weekend to do it - it’s too far to go home each evening.
So what random orbital sander has the best dust extraction ability? I have a wet / dry vaccum to do the sooking and filtering.
Thanks.
Late to the party, but my setup for bottom sanding…..
Sounds great for you, my concern would be for your neighbour in the boatyard that’s not togged up for dry sanding anti foul.So I then wear a higher end half face mask from 3M. *
https://www.3m.co.uk/3M/en_GB/p/d/v101711008/
*PROVIDES A2P3 RESPIRATORY PROTECTION - A2 protection against certain organic gases and vapours such as solvent based paint, adhesive and cleaning detergents, and P3 protection with 99% particulate filtration at medium levels of fine dust and mist
I don't do indoor sanding, only out door and only ad-hoc, so the "weak link" of the dust extraction is something I an at peace with ...
The Mafell is silky smooth - no vibration issues with my hands, Its light enough for a days use under the boat and its not overly noisy (I wear ear protection).
M
If you are sanding the underside of a boat, the importance of lightness and quality of dust extraction increase tenfold. I think the Mirka kit we borrowed is circa £600. The lightness of the sander is dramatically better than our Bosch GEX250. The length of the extraction hose on the Mirka made everything so much easier.Best, and best value are probably different - and the form factor also comes into it. I have not used one but understand that Mirka/3M are the best - the reason I don't have one is the price.
I have two Bosch GEX turbo - 150 & 125mm. Both are great for dust extraction. I also have a Dewalt 125mm as it's a smaller machine. It's noiser and not as smooth or comfortable as the Bosch, but the dust extraction is good, it's smaller, and at around £100 is a fair price.
It is important to have good dust extraction, L class is best if you are using it inddor, but I have an M class Vacmaster and use HEPA bags which does great. Being 30ltr and having good suction it is a beast and has been well worth it in our refit.
I didn't think Makita had a sander like the Mirka, I thought theirs was in the Bosch style. I like the 'turbo' sanders, especially for material removal, but I also have a smaller, lighter sander for the reasosns you mention. I have a number of sanders, they tend to keep growing in my collection!....
If you are sanding the underside of a boat, the importance of lightness and quality of dust extraction increase tenfold. I think the Mirka kit we borrowed is circa £600. The lightness of the sander is dramatically better than our Bosch GEX250. The length of the extraction hose on the Mirka made everything so much easier.
The price is hard to swallow, but if I ever had to sand the bottom again, I would buy the Makita equivalent of the Mirka. Both professional machines but some twin filters on the Makita with autochange over and an alarm to tell you are good features. I also like Makita stuff.
Fear not, it CAN be done with a £25 Lidl special and a set of earplugs.So it looks like for sanding a hull with dust extracted to a vac you need to be spending £400 or up for a decent sander?
I was expecting it would be closer to the £100-£150 mark, but then the two orbitals I have were about £35-£40 from amazon.
There is a huge and very noticable difefrence between good & bad when it comes to sanding, and it's fairly linear with price (excluding Festool).So it looks like for sanding a hull with dust extracted to a vac you need to be spending £400 or up for a decent sander?
I was expecting it would be closer to the £100-£150 mark, but then the two orbitals I have were about £35-£40 from amazon.
Fair point, In my defence, its a small yard and there are not often others in proximity at the same time.Sounds great for you, my concern would be for your neighbour in the boatyard that’s not togged up for dry sanding anti foul.
Yes, plenty of deals to be had. I picked up a V-Tuf M class 20 ltr as a little 'boat vac' to save lugging the big one around. On eBay, ex-display £100. It almost didn't make it to the boat as the other half got hold of it and loved the extendable hose, so it nearly became the house vac!Fair point, In my defence, its a small yard and there are not often others in proximity at the same time.
Looking online, there are class M extractors £120-£160, might be time to fire up the blackfriday card!
M
Fair point, In my defence, its a small yard and there are not often others in proximity at the same time.
Looking online, there are class M extractors £120-£160, might be time to fire up the blackfriday card!
M
The reason discs don't stay on the pad is because you have destroyed the velcro either through age or pressing too hard. The pads tend to be expensive to replace so people ( those that are aware) use pad savers which are effectively sacrificial pads that are used in-between the disc and pad and are much cheaper than pads.I have a Bosch which decided to slo0w down and now hardly works ! I nipped out to check Lidl just in case they had something ... and I was lucky ...
My orbital now is that Lidl machine ... as another says - its noisy, vibrates a lot so your hand tends to buzz for a while after prolonged use ... but it works.
To stop sanding pads slipping on the velcro ... a neat trick :
Take a Hot Glue gun and put dollops at each corner on the sander ... press the sanding pad on .. let it cool a few secs ... you will find pad now stays in place. But you can still easily remove ... you can peel the Hot Glue off and make new for next pad etc.