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16th March 2007, 03:31 PM #1
another diamond tool retailer - Australian business.
http://www.precisiondiamondtools.com.au/
Not the easiest web site to navigate for the layman, but if you take a look at the products and prices in here and look at "honing plates" and "mulesing plates" you might be pleased at the prices/sizes.
They only use mono-crystals, and make their own products.
There is an 'off-catalogue' product that they are emailing me info on, a product that they retail and don't actually make. Its a flexible disk for an angle grinder that is embedded with diamond and silicon carbide.
Also sell reasonably priced Diamond compounds and pastes if thats your thing.
Have fun.
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8th April 2007, 10:40 PM #2Hewer of wood
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Thanks.
For plane irons which would you recommend ... the honing plate or the universal tool sharpener?
TIACheers, Ern
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8th April 2007, 11:01 PM #3
Notice they got router bits too, just the thing for making nice stone kitchen/vanity bench tops.
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9th April 2007, 07:10 PM #4
Ern, I'd check with the company, I made some enquiries with this company about 6 years ago, I think the diamond coating process was different with different products.
The result from memory was different coating thicknesses & evenness..
The beatings will continue until morale improves.
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9th April 2007, 09:18 PM #5Hewer of wood
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Thanks Scooter, will do.
Cheers, Ern
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9th April 2007, 11:22 PM #6
Thinking about it, I think 2 of the coating types were referred to as electroplated & electrolytic.
One apparently left an even coating across the substrate, the other resulted in a thicker coating at the edges & thinner in the centre of a face. Can't remember which was which though.
The beatings will continue until morale improves.
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10th April 2007, 12:28 AM #7
And then there's the paralytic coating, leaves a random trail of diamond grit in, out, around the centre and off the edge.
Mick
(note to mods, I hope this is seen as banter [allowed] and not drivel [punishable] as I've managed to avoid, so far at least, even getting a reddie)"If you need a machine today and don't buy it,
tomorrow you will have paid for it and not have it."
- Henry Ford 1938
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