Collection: Grinding Wheels

Grinding Wheels are bonded-abrasive wheels used on grinders to remove material, shape parts or sharpen tools by abrasion.

Key Characteristics:

  • Abrasive Composition: Made from grains such as aluminium oxide, silicon carbide or ceramic abrasives, held together by bonds (vitrified clay, resin, rubber or metal).

  • Grit & Grade:

    • Grit Size: Ranges from coarse (24–60 grit) for rapid stock removal to fine (100–220 grit) for finishing and sharpening.

    • Grade (Hardness): Letter-coded (A–Z), where softer grades wear faster to expose new abrasive, and harder grades last longer under light loads.

  • Structure (Porosity): Numbered 1–17, indicating the spacing between abrasive grains—higher numbers mean more open structure for coolant flow and chip clearance.

  • Wheel Shape & Type:

    • Straight (Type 1): Flat-faced, general-purpose wheels for surface grinding and tool sharpening.

    • Depressed-Centre (Type 27): Offset centre for angle-grinder applications and flush cutting.

    • Cut-Off (Type 1 or 41): Very thin wheels for slicing metal or stone.

    • Cylinder & Cup: Used on pedestal grinders for internal or edge grinding.

  • Dimensions: Specified by diameter (e.g. 150 mm, 200 mm), thickness (e.g. 6 mm–25 mm) and bore size (e.g. 12.7 mm, 22.23 mm) to fit various machines.

  • Speed Rating: Maximum safe operating speed stamped on the wheel (RPM), which must match or exceed the grinder’s no-load speed.

Common Uses:

  • Surface Grinding: Flattening or truing metal faces and removing scale or weld spatter.

  • Tool & Cutter Sharpening: Restoring edges on chisels, drill bits, lathe tools and hand tools.

  • Stock Removal & Profiling: Rapidly shaping castings, forgings or machined parts.

  • Cut-Off Operations: Cutting bars, rods or plate stock with thin cut-off wheels.

  • Deburring & Blending: Smoothing rough edges and transitions after fabrication or machining.

17 products