|  | 
| 
			 
			#1  
			
			
			
			
			
		 | |||
| 
 | |||
|  Small Part Buffing and Polishing 
			
			What would be the best approach for working with small parts of Bakelite, or Lucite, that require buffing/polishing? There are lots of excellent compounds out there, but I am wondering about tools? Seems to be lots of polishing kits out there for Dremel style tools. Anyone ever worked with them enough to figure out their benefits and/or pitfalls? David | 
| 
			 
			#2  
			
			
			
			
			
		 | ||||
| 
 | ||||
|   
			
			Dremel works great but you need to “go slow” as it can quickly overdo it and wreck something very fast compared to hand buffing.
		 
				__________________ Jordan Baker RHLI Museum, Otter LRC C15A-Wire3, 1944 Willys MB, 1942 10cwt Canadian trailer | 
| 
			 
			#3  
			
			
			
			
			
		 | |||
| 
 | |||
|   
			
			Personally I'd fit a buffing wheel to a bench grinder and hold the part in a handheld vice of some sort (pliers, vice grips, threaded rod on a stick...  I think actual buffing setups are slower speed and larger diameter then most home/hobby ones. I believe this is to allow for heat dissipation. Also plan on holding the tool or holding the part. Holding both is for desperate last minute touch ups before shows  Matt | 
|  | 
| 
 | 
 | 
|  Similar Threads | ||||
| Thread | Thread Starter | Forum | Replies | Last Post | 
| For Sale: 25 pdr small parts | rnixartillery | For Sale Or Wanted | 1 | 10-03-18 22:22 | 
| Wanted: a very small part! | Michael Eastes | For Sale Or Wanted | 3 | 11-04-12 08:01 | 
| Small World | Barry Churcher | The Sergeants' Mess | 3 | 25-10-10 09:35 | 
| very small | Hendrik van Oorspronk | The Carrier Forum | 6 | 28-07-09 10:16 | 
| The big and the small, we love 'em all | sapper740 | The Softskin Forum | 7 | 08-04-07 00:30 |