BadBob Posted Sunday at 12:35 PM Report Posted Sunday at 12:35 PM Is anyone using one of these? Quote
TAIrving Posted Sunday at 12:55 PM Report Posted Sunday at 12:55 PM Following- looks interesting. OCtoolguy 1 Quote
Scrappile Posted Sunday at 01:15 PM Report Posted Sunday at 01:15 PM (edited) No, but I use a Mac Mop from Klingspor a lot, almost the same thing. I would not be without it. Looks like you can change it out to brushes. That would be great, I would think. Edited Sunday at 01:16 PM by Scrappile OCtoolguy 1 Quote
OCtoolguy Posted Sunday at 04:39 PM Report Posted Sunday at 04:39 PM (edited) I had one of the original ones many years ago. It was meant to be mounted on a bench grinder shaft. I never did use it and it got sold in our estate sale before going out on the road. It was a neat and well made tool. @Scrappile, the brushes mount behind the sand paper and support tbe paper fingers. Edited Sunday at 04:40 PM by OCtoolguy Scrappile and MarieC 2 Quote
Dave Monk Posted Sunday at 06:09 PM Report Posted Sunday at 06:09 PM I would love it if you would buy it and give us a review. OCtoolguy 1 Quote
Gonzo Posted Sunday at 10:21 PM Report Posted Sunday at 10:21 PM I do not, but I use do use a sanding mop similar to what Scrappile posted. However, I make my own. Much less expensive and very easy to make. OCtoolguy, danny and barb.j.enders 3 Quote
Scrappile Posted Sunday at 11:37 PM Report Posted Sunday at 11:37 PM 1 hour ago, Gonzo said: I do not, but I use do use a sanding mop similar to what Scrappile posted. However, I make my own. Much less expensive and very easy to make. I have those, and they are good, but I prefer the Mac Mop. I have it mounted on my lathe and I use it mainly to remove the fuzzies off of the back of a scrolled, piece. It does a great job, wow they cost $20 more now than when I purchased the one I have. https://www.klingspor.com/shop/262644-mm630180178050-193045 OCtoolguy, Dave Monk and MarieC 2 1 Quote
BadBob Posted Monday at 10:38 AM Author Report Posted Monday at 10:38 AM I have a MacMop and a sanding mop, both from Klingspor. What I would like to see is someone who has the Sand-o-Flex and a MacMop and/or sanding mop and can compare them. OCtoolguy 1 Quote
Denny Knappen Posted Monday at 03:07 PM Report Posted Monday at 03:07 PM As Paul said, I also use the Mac Mop on almost every project. It comes in several different grits. Completely assembled for around $40. OCtoolguy 1 Quote
Scrappile Posted Monday at 03:16 PM Report Posted Monday at 03:16 PM 6 minutes ago, Denny Knappen said: As Paul said, I also use the Mac Mop on almost every project. It comes in several different grits. Completely assembled for around $40. Denny, yours must be about as old is mine. That is around what I paid, Now they are over $60! OCtoolguy 1 Quote
Travis Posted Monday at 05:06 PM Report Posted Monday at 05:06 PM On 3/30/2025 at 5:35 AM, BadBob said: Is anyone using one of these? I have one. I found it was a bit delicate for sanding. Probably good in some situations. But I usually prefer something a bit more aggressive. So, I don't use it much. I use sanding star/sanding mop similar to Gonzo's instead. Dave Monk, BadBob and OCtoolguy 3 Quote
MarieC Posted Monday at 05:47 PM Report Posted Monday at 05:47 PM On 3/30/2025 at 6:15 AM, Scrappile said: No, but I use a Mac Mop from Klingspor a lot, almost the same thing. I would not be without it. Looks like you can change it out to brushes. That would be great, I would think. Paul do you mount it on a drill press then as well? OCtoolguy 1 Quote
Scrappile Posted Monday at 06:26 PM Report Posted Monday at 06:26 PM 36 minutes ago, MarieC said: Paul do you mount it on a drill press then as well? No, Mine is mounted on my wood lathe. I want to mount it on a slow speed grinder I have, but it is too fast for me. Some day I want to set it up to stacked pulleys so I have some control of the speed. Got the parts, just have not taken the time. OCtoolguy 1 Quote
MarieC Posted Monday at 08:43 PM Report Posted Monday at 08:43 PM 2 hours ago, Scrappile said: No, Mine is mounted on my wood lathe. I want to mount it on a slow speed grinder I have, but it is too fast for me. Some day I want to set it up to stacked pulleys so I have some control of the speed. Got the parts, just have not taken the time. Do you know if it would fit on this thing. We sell these at Woodcraft....https://www.woodworkingshop.com/product/KX11307/?gad_source=1&gclid=CjwKCAjw-qi_BhBxEiwAkxvbkKAaRhETwHOmhlum9PI8Z5VS47TNw304hwFkbYuYlx0jnyveLGrpdxoCVLMQAvD_BwE OCtoolguy 1 Quote
Scrappile Posted Monday at 09:47 PM Report Posted Monday at 09:47 PM 35 minutes ago, MarieC said: Do you know if it would fit on this thing. We sell these at Woodcraft....https://www.woodworkingshop.com/product/KX11307/?gad_source=1&gclid=CjwKCAjw-qi_BhBxEiwAkxvbkKAaRhETwHOmhlum9PI8Z5VS47TNw304hwFkbYuYlx0jnyveLGrpdxoCVLMQAvD_BwE It has a 1/4" shaft, so it would fit in that chuck. OCtoolguy and MarieC 1 1 Quote
Denny Knappen Posted Tuesday at 04:28 PM Report Posted Tuesday at 04:28 PM On 3/31/2025 at 11:16 AM, Scrappile said: Denny, yours must be about as old is mine. That is around what I paid, Now they are over $60! I just looked them up and the price is $49.95. They sometimes are on sale. MarieC, Scrappile and OCtoolguy 3 Quote
barb.j.enders Posted Wednesday at 12:14 PM Report Posted Wednesday at 12:14 PM On 3/31/2025 at 12:06 PM, Travis said: I have one. I found it was a bit delicate for sanding. Probably good in some situations. But I usually prefer something a bit more aggressive. So, I don't use it much. I use sanding star/sanding mop similar to Gonzo's instead. If it is delicate for sanding, I wonder if it would be good for easing edges on the puzzles. OCtoolguy 1 Quote
Travis Posted Wednesday at 04:44 PM Report Posted Wednesday at 04:44 PM It's been awhile since I've used it last, but I seem to remember using it on puzzles. The nice thing with this sander, it has a single layer of sandpaper that splits into long fingers that get into the tight areas as it spins. A sanding mop has many layers of sandpaper, so while maluable, it covers a larger area. I also seem to remember using it on ornaments that have delicate fretwork and it seemed to work well, especially dealing with the fuzzies. barb.j.enders, OCtoolguy and danny 3 Quote
Roberta Moreton Posted Wednesday at 10:08 PM Report Posted Wednesday at 10:08 PM This really surprises me! It looked extremely aggressive! I would be afraid to try it! danny and OCtoolguy 2 Quote
BadBob Posted yesterday at 11:03 AM Author Report Posted yesterday at 11:03 AM Sand-O-Flex seems to be used a lot by wood carvers. OCtoolguy 1 Quote
Travis Posted yesterday at 04:05 PM Report Posted yesterday at 04:05 PM It's kinda hard to see, but there are perforations in the sandpaper that rip down into thin strips, so it creates these little fingers. The brush behind it gives the fingers a bit of support but bends when the work is pressed against it. I think the advantage is that it can find its way into tight areas. But since they are micro bits of sandpaper, it's not as aggressive (based on my experience, anyway....maybe I'm doing it wrong ). I usually don't need that too much, which is why I like the sanding mop. It tends to soften everything....plus I'm impatient. OCtoolguy 1 Quote
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