An eight inch sander will work just fine. The added bonus of being able to use an 8 1/2 x 11" sheet of wet or dry sandpaper for various metal finishing needs.
Posts: 1634 | Location: Washington State | Registered: 29 December 2002
I'm with dj, belt sander is the way to go. I may hit a pad on a disc sander to speed things up, but once it get serious a belt sander is the way to go, I have a 2", it works fine.
Posts: 1868 | Location: League City, Texas | Registered: 11 April 2003
How big a wheel do you need to do a credible job on recoil pads?
Seems like I always have one to install, and end up driving waaayyyy down the road to use a friend's 10". So I'm wondering if an 8" benchtop unit would be sufficient.
Posts: 1246 | Location: Northern Virginia, USA | Registered: 02 June 2001
My experince is a bit different, not necessarily any better though. I have two belt sanders and two discs. The belts will take a lot of material off but I get a better finish with a 12" disc.
I always had trouble getting the rubber to come to the same contour of the hard plate at the bottom. I noticed once that Gary Goudy's were flush with each other and asked him how he did it and he said a disc sander and the bigger the better. His, I believe, is a 16". My 12" does a good job. I may remove the majority with a belt but the final gets done on a disc.
If I had to choose one or the other it would be a disc for this purpose.
Posts: 4917 | Location: Wenatchee, WA, USA | Registered: 17 December 2001
I have a 6x48 belt AND 12" disk combo sander.... $229 from harbour freight, free delivery....
ya, sure, it'll get a 220v motor sooner or later, BUT it rocks for pad works... I got the el nasty cheapo "installation" kit from brownells... and it makes a really damn good toe on the pad....
a "silvers" PINK pad drives me insane... orange dust everwhere....looks like the cheetos cheetah went through a snow blower
In 28 years of Gunsmithing I have used a Baldor 2X48 belt sander and would not use anything else. Much more control than a disc sander. Have used several disc sanders of different sizes and will always stick to my belt sander. Have mounted hundreds of pads and love my belt sander. Also for cutting a stock to length a good band saw is the best. With a good blade there is never any chipping even on Browning high gloss stocks.
Posts: 239 | Location: North Smithfield, RI USA | Registered: 09 March 2002