DIY & Home Improvement
Related: About this forumSanding belts
I have a few fine grain old belts from the 80s, manufactured in the U.S.A. in Reading PA. Bought direct from the factory, glued joints, rarely ever pop a joint, I mean rarely. I need some coarse grain belts.
Now I get these modern ones at the Big Box store, $2-4 each, with mylar tape joints. All the brands I looked at had these joints. They've been here 4-5 years and took some humidity which they say online is a problem, and they last 30 seconds. Should I buy more of these? Does anyone make sanding belts like they did in 1985? Is humidity the issue? I think the 5/8" wide mylar is a lousy joining method.
There are articles on repairing broken belts, mostly with Super Glue on the mylar tape. I got 10 minutes out of them but still that's not good at all.
Do we make anything well anymore?
grumpyduck
(6,650 posts)online like Rockler or Lee Valley, or Grizzly. They have higher-quality products than the big box stores.
LunaSea
(2,927 posts)"Hazard Fraught"
Interesting vids on DIY belts.
I had no idea....
Tried Maverick Abrasives?
They have a page on why belts break.
You may want to consider spending more than a couple of bucks if you want them to perform well.
bucolic_frolic
(46,979 posts)The mail order belts, mix and match were about a dollar a piece, Two dozen for around $30.
I'd buy glue overlap jointed belts if I could find them. I only looked at Walmart and Lowes. Hadn't thought of HF. These ones that broke are the dominant red box brand, and like I say they are several years old, so I gotta discount my experience for that.
Thanks for the ideas.