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  1. #1
    Senior Member Milton Man's Avatar
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    Default Re-using felt Dremel wheels

    Hi Gents,
    So I was working on a razor yesterday, and started going through these darn expensive felt wheel I use to buff Mass...they get all black and slick fairly quickly, and then become pretty useless, so I was thinking to myself, well, I wonder if I could "dress" a felt wheel.

    I took a quick look around my shop, and saw a paint scraper I had been using the weekend before - It had a fairly keen metal edge, was pretty sturdy, so I gave it a go - on about a "3" speed, I gently "dressed" the felt wheel, cleaning the metal edge on the scraper periodically, and low and behold, the felt came clean! A little fuzzy, but nothing that two rubs of the hand didn't take care of!

    Just a little tip from my bench...every bit helps, right guys?

    Mark

  2. The Following 2 Users Say Thank You to Milton Man For This Useful Post:

    BeBerlin (10-26-2008), netsurfr (10-26-2008)

  3. #2
    what Dad calls me nun2sharp's Avatar
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    Sounds like an excellent idea, you can bet that I am going to use it the next time the dremel comes out.
    It is easier to fool people than to convince them they have been fooled. Twain

  4. #3
    JAS eTea, LLC netsurfr's Avatar
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    very nice tip!

  5. #4
    Loudmouth FiReSTaRT's Avatar
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    They're a lot cheaper if you get'em from Widgetsupply.

  6. #5
    Senior Member iron maiden's Avatar
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    Nice tip....even if they were free, I'd still probably try to dress them, as I am both cheap and lazy...I know, but I just hate to see things go to waste.

  7. #6
    Senior Member Milton Man's Avatar
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    ...well, as a bit of an update, I tried again with a seriously dirty wheel I had left over, and while it did improve the felt wheel, it didn't completely restore it...so it half works - sorry to get eveyone's hopes up! I was really excited about it yesterday when it took a light-to-medium dirty wheel and completely restored it to like-new.

    Mark

  8. #7
    newb
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    haha either way that's an extra 2-3 uses out of it :P which means 2-3 less that you have to buy :-)

  9. #8
    Senior Member smythe's Avatar
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    Eventually the "rake" will become dull and lose its effectiveness and you will have to replace the rake or buffing wheel, but you can also soak or wash the felt wheel in lighter fluid (naphtha), it will dissolve the black oily residue in the wheel.
    Pour a generous amount of the fluid in a jar and drop in the wheel, then give it a good shake, then squeeze out the excess and allow it to dry.

    If you feel adventurous you may put the still soaked wheel in your dremel and run it at high speed to help “throw” out the remaining gunk and dry quickly (do this over a sink).
    CAUTION: naphtha is flammable; the sparks from the motor's brush could set it off.

  10. #9
    newb
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    Quote Originally Posted by smythe View Post
    CAUTION: naphtha is flammable; the sparks from the motor's brush could set it off.


    that sounds interesting :-)

  11. #10
    Senior Member smythe's Avatar
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    I should add... I use the dremel to dry the still wet wheel, and it works very well, never had a "flame-up". However I do this outside where there is plenty of ventilation.

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