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From YouTube: Surface grinding ironworker angle shear blade
Description
This video was uploaded from an Android phone.
A
Alright
Brandon
here
on
the
surface,
grinder
first
time,
I've
ever
used
it,
but
I've
already
done
a
couple
of
lays.
Well
today
is
these
blades
have
gotten
a
little
bit
damaged
in
transit,
and
so
what
I'm
doing
is
basically
grinding
away
where
they're
damaged,
so
it
won't
either
hit
the
other
blade,
witness,
chomping
or
cause
a
cut
to
be
not
as
clean
as
it
could
be.
So
basically,
the
first
step
was
look
at
the
blade
and
determine
the
cleanest
mounting
service.
A
Very
stuck
it's
a
magnetic
base
here.
So
you
turn
this
on.
It's
actually
off.
Oh
I
might
need
a
machine
that
a
little
more
anyway,
so
first
step
was
big
blue.
Look
at
which
side
determine
which
is
the
cleanest
side
and
essentially
where
to
mount.
Is
there's
any
dent
to
mount
that,
so
those
dents
are
off
the
table,
I'm,
not
sure
how
well
you
can
see
it,
but
there's
a
good
sized
one
here.
This
is
at
least
a
few
thousands,
so
I'm
going
to
put
this
side
off
of
the
table
that
way
it
doesn't
damage.
A
A
A
B
A
A
B
A
A
Anyways
you
see
each
of
those
increments.
You
see
the
writing.
Those
are
all
thousands,
so
actually
each
increment
is
a
half
a
thousand,
so
you
can
be
super.
Super
precise
in
this
I
can't
find
any
tutorials
on
this,
so
I
mean
your
guess
is
as
good
as
mine
with
technique.
A
Martin
told
me:
he
thought
it
was
you
supposed
to
take
off
about
five
thousands
at
once,
which
I've
had
luck
doing,
but
when
it's
with
the
other
blades,
when
it
started
getting
close
to
this
edge,
I
just
slowed
down
and
did
like
or
not
five
thousand
half
a
thousand.
So
when
it
get
got
close,
I
slowed
down
to
a
quarter
of
a
thousand,
so
that
I
would
hit
the
blade
itself
and
take
to
my
job
and
not
just
hit
the
limpid
head
ground.