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New life to a old hockey puck
PekkaNF:
I hope I will not need silicon. I only know two uses of it :lol:
Normal machine feet sets in floor that tight that after few years you need to prise them away, I had a top coat of the floor to come off with them...
I meant more like restrain, I'm not sure if the grinding machine jumps or shakes if something goes wrong. I never used grinder of this size, I'll start it first time without anything on arbour. I'll be wearing brown pants when I'll mount the disc there first time. If it shakes or jumps, I'm not worried about it getting out of level, I'm afraid one feet landing off the puck and table rolling off the grinder or something. And ofcourse bursting disc is very high on my list of "Not wishing to happen in this life".
Pekka
NeoTech:
if one look at commercial grade feet.. most of the heavy load ones has a steel cup around the rubber part. Maybean idea make a loose fit container for the puck so it doesnt collpase.
PekkaNF:
Jep I have those on milling machine. There are two cups one vulcanized? to the rubber and outer one. O-ring on circumference. More than 3 mm thick. O' joy of pressing one, welding or turning....Hmmm. 80 mm stock and turning would give all kind of possibilities, like turning some "cooling fins" on outside!
I'm going to test them soon, hopefully I'll get of my work early to spare an hour or more on the machine. Let's see what initial test will reveal.
Pekka
NeoTech:
I would prob. just take a piece of pipe that fits and turn the inside so they slip over.
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