Silvergrizz
New member
Well, I thought I was going to get some welding done today, but it didn't happen. I figured I had about 45 minutes work cleaning up the cuts I had done on the A-Arms. This is a 68 degree angle, so needless to say, I had to do it free hand with a mini grinder. I discovered there are two types of cut off disks. Flat and cupped. I had been using the cupped ones, which would wear out fast and not go all the way through the square steel. I had picked up another pack on sale some time ago, and not till I opened them, did I realize they were flat. Worked a lot better, and go all the way through the steel from one side. Still not a pretty cut as the pictures show.
Decided to make a simple 22 degree jig to guide the pieces on the belt sander for squaring up. Simple enough, but you want the steel pointing in the opposite direction to the travel of the belt, or its going to jam. It ended up taking about 30 minutes per piece, allowing time for cool down, heat will destroy the sandpaper real quick. I was wearing leather gloves and when I felt the heat through the glove, I would swap out to another piece of steel.
Also going to have to make a jig to weld up the A-Arms, probably the most critical part of the build to keep them all a the same or as close as possible. :toetap05:
First picture is the rough cut 68 degree angle
Second is the belt sander using 50 grit paper and jig
Third is the result
Decided to make a simple 22 degree jig to guide the pieces on the belt sander for squaring up. Simple enough, but you want the steel pointing in the opposite direction to the travel of the belt, or its going to jam. It ended up taking about 30 minutes per piece, allowing time for cool down, heat will destroy the sandpaper real quick. I was wearing leather gloves and when I felt the heat through the glove, I would swap out to another piece of steel.
Also going to have to make a jig to weld up the A-Arms, probably the most critical part of the build to keep them all a the same or as close as possible. :toetap05:
First picture is the rough cut 68 degree angle
Second is the belt sander using 50 grit paper and jig
Third is the result

For the record: Credit goes to Bill for the sanding idea, I never would have thought of it either, till I asked him how he got such clean looking finish cuts.


