Grizzly Baby Drum Sander
Conveyor Belt Motor
Jan '14: I got an email asking how I mounted the gear motor. The mount is two pieces of steel angle (screwed together, could be welded) with the leg of the top one sandwiched between the roller adjuster casting and the bed. The bottom angle was made from a scrap of channel with one leg cut off (I'm not sure why, it doesn't look like it would have been in the way). I also drilled and tapped the bed so that I could use screws in all four holes of the casting. I used the stock sprockets and chain. I couldn't find a sprocket that fit, both the gear motor shaft and the relatively narrow chain, and had to use some sort of sleeve (don't remember) to get the stock sprocket to fit snugly on the 1/2" gear motor shaft.
Apr '17: Someone emailed requesting more information about my gearmotor. It is a Bodine type 34R4BFCI-Z4 (Series 34R-Z, Model 0448), 115v, 1a, 1/15hp, 19rpm, 90:1 ratio, 100lb-in. While it works as desired, it was just the cheapest/best solution I could find on eBay at that time.
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Comments [ new ]
- Re: Grizzly Baby Drum Sander
- Posted by Mike on Saturday, 19-Mar-2016
I too have one of the Grizzly sander. My feed table stopped working while sanding small pieces of oak. I took the feed motor off and noticed inside one of the gears had broke. Plastic gear on a metal motor shaft. Grizzly wanted $160.00 for a replacement motor assembly. I needed it soon I am building a oak crib for my daughter and her husband. They shipped the complete motor assembly and when I tried to put the gear onto the motor, guess what it's to small. The shaft on the new motor is bigger, used digital calipers and the new shaft is .389 bigger ? Grizzly does not show the drive gear listed individually. My next step is to take the old drive gear to a local machine shop and have it made to fit ! I'm glad I work within the same business as the machine shop, it's still going to cost me $50.00 to have the hub and sprocket made to fit. At least the crib might be done !
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- Re: Grizzly Baby Drum Sander
- Posted by Garry Loeffler on Sunday, 23-Nov-2014
Hi
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I have a baby drum sander .I did not know 8" was as small as you could go. I make segmented bowls. Has anyone made a sled for putting smaller segmented rings , 3 or 4 inches through the sander safely?
Garry- Re: Grizzly Baby Drum Sander
- Posted by Dave on Tuesday, 25-Nov-2014
Garry,
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I often use a sled (PB or MDF board) that's longer than the work to compensate for the spongy feed belt (i.e. to reduce snipe). I'd think small pieces would have to be fastened to the sled and that you'd have to arrange them in a line so that you had more than 8" in length going through the sander.
Attaching side strips to the sled, the same height and longer than your combined pieces, minimizes snipe even more. It is a pain because it's a one time thing, the strips are only effective if they get sanded along with the parts. They need to be at least 4" longer on each end to be in contact with the pressure rollers before/after the parts contact/leave the drum... found/added example image.
If you contained the parts with side strips and front/back stops, you might not need to fasten them to the sled. They'd have to fit tightly together and you'd have to take really light passes... This could be a bad/dangerous idea, 3-4" is pretty darn short and the friction of the rotating drum will try to lift the pieces off the sled.