I find it amusing that you use the term, "pretty dangerous" for a buffer and then recommend a Dremel. Are you serious? :nono:
Printable View
Come on ProudMarineDad... What could go wrong with using a dremel.... LolAttachment 230222
I've been around for a while doing this razor thing. You can ask others or look in the other forums... some of the best have had some pretty horrendous accidents running a razor across a buffer... but I'm just putting my 2 cents out there. There's nothing stopping you from taping off your blade and locking it in a bench vise and then doing the work you need to do with the dremel... or take your chances with gloves and a buffing wheel.. whatevs... I was in the Air Force for a reason leatherneck :)
I think the simple reason that buffers are safer that Dremels is because you always know what direction the buffer is spinning. As you are re-positioning and dealing with both sides of the blade using a Dremel, it's too easy to forget which way the Dremel wheel is spinning relative to the edge of the blade.
Hah, true, but doesn't that advice apply to everything :) Come on now, some of us are grownups.... a little bit.
Exactly my friend. I have been a plastic modeler for 30 years and worked around metal and wood tools since I was a kid so I am no stranger to tools and the dangers of them.
Yes a buffer can be very dangerous as can a bandsaw, tablesaw, lathe, mill, or any other number of things.
Anyways, the tumbler is a great way to go.
As my father who was a mechanic, welder and a machinist used to like to say:
"Ya gotta be smarter than the thing your trying to operate".
The problem as I see it is that there are way too many out there that aren't that smart and get hurt because they get lulled into a false sense of security and get out smarted by a machine with no brain.