Belt Sanders: The
"Bulldozer" Tool Understanding the sand and the
fury by Curtis Rist
How It Works
All About Size
Dealing with Dust
Speed and Slippage
Grit: Coarse or Fine?
Belt Maintenance
A belt sander looks--and acts--like the bulldozer of the toolbox. Applied to
a piece of wood, the tool's continuous band of sandpaper tears effortlessly
through layers of old paint or patches of rough wood to reveal a fresh surface
underneath. Used carefully, belt sanders can
make quick work of stock that would otherwise have to be laboriously sanded by
hand. But like a grinder, the belt sander has a relentless fury. If held in one
place even an instant too long, it will make irreparable gouges in the very
surface you're trying to smooth. How It Works Regardless of size, all belt sanders
operate on the same principle: a loop of sandpaper
wraps around a rear roller and a front roller, creating tension between the two.
When the sander is switched on, the rear drive roller (which is usually
connected to the motor) spins, causing the sanding belt to move forward like the
tread of a bulldozer. This is far more aggressive than an orbital sander, in
which the sanding pad rotates in a very small circle. But belt sanders can
take on far bigger jobs: old layers of paint can disappear with one swipe of the
tool, and a wide piece of wood can be leveled smooth with just a few passes.
All About
Size Sanding belts typically range from 3 inches wide by 18 to 21
inches in circumference to 4 inches by 24 inches for large models. Smaller belt
sanders have also begun to appear on the market. Some feature belts just over 1
inch wide, with a front roller that's smaller than the rear roller. This narrows
the point of the belt, making it easier to control and maneuver into
hard-to-reach areas, such as the gaps between railing posts on an outdoor deck.
Despite the tame appearance of these smaller tools, they're still wild at heart
and can easily damage wood if you don't keep them in motion.
Dealing with
Dust Belt sanders generate a lot of dust--which is a health
hazard, especially when you're sanding pressure-treated wood or wood whose
surface contains lead-based paint. Dust bags attached to the tools help to
gather up the sawdust and reduce the amount that floats in the air or clogs up
the grit on the sanding belt. The highest-quality belt sanders can be hooked up
directly to shop
vacuums, which suck away all the dust. This system keeps the belt cleaner,
and you'll get more mileage out of it as a result. (See our guide on dust collectors.)
Speed and
Slippage Some sanders are equipped with variable-speed controls.
Although professionals may not need this capability, homeowners may find it a
plus because it will help them slow things down until they develop good control
of the tool. The belts themselves have a tendency to wander slightly off the
rollers, so you may need to reposition them occasionally. Some have a tracking
knob that you can turn to slide the belt back into place; others have tracking
devices that do this automatically.
Grit: Coarse or
Fine? All sanding belts
contain grit in varying degrees of coarseness that are attached by
resin to a cloth or paper surface. They range from 24 grit--the coarsest--to a
fine 320. The belts themselves can be made of paper, but paper tears more easily
and has a shorter life span than cloth-based alternatives.
The grit used in the most economical belts is made from aluminum oxide; these
belts are good for all-purpose wood sanding. Belts covered with grit made from
ceramic aluminum oxide don't wear out as quickly--but not surprisingly, they
cost more. In addition, belts come in two varieties of grit--closed-coat and
open-coat. The grit of closed-coat belts is compacted tightly in the resin,
which is good for use on metal or on hardwoods that don't tend to produce gummy
dust. On open-coat belts, the grit is spaced out to cut down on clogging. Choose
open-coat belts if you're sanding resinous softwoods such as pine, or woods that
have painted surfaces. See all belt
sanders
Belt
Maintenance No matter what the grit, you can extend the life span
of a belt by cleaning it occasionally. Just set it on its side and spin it
against a neoprine rubber cleaning block or the rubber sole of a castoff tennis
shoe. This removes any dust or grime clogged between the grit particles. To
further prolong the life of a belt, don't press down hard on the sander when
using it; it will simply add a strain on the machine and the sanding belt. And
before sanding anything, check for nails: nothing tears a belt faster than
hitting a nail or a screw.
Curtis Rist, a writer for This Old House magazine,
parks his power tool collection in New York's Hudson River
Valley.
Article courtesy of Amazon.com.
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