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Author Topic: A shop-built skate holder for sharpening with a Pro-Filer  (Read 7268 times)

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Offline Bill_S

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Re: A shop-built skate holder for sharpening with a Pro-Filer
« Reply #25 on: July 18, 2019, 08:25:49 AM »
Speaking of tossing in the kitchen sink (metaphor, ya know), I did have a thought to include a paper towel holder on the back side. It's actually large enough for one.

I don't think this will come to pass because it will become too bulky to carry. I'm just confessing to thoughts going through my mind at the time.



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Offline tstop4me

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Re: A shop-built skate holder for sharpening with a Pro-Filer
« Reply #26 on: July 18, 2019, 09:54:46 PM »
How about a beer cooler underneath?

Offline Bill_S

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Re: A shop-built skate holder for sharpening with a Pro-Filer
« Reply #27 on: July 19, 2019, 07:30:15 AM »
With my tendencies, a first-aid kit would be better.  :D
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Offline Bill_S

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Re: A shop-built skate holder for sharpening with a Pro-Filer
« Reply #28 on: July 19, 2019, 08:44:54 AM »
I painted the removable cover with General Finishes "Tuscan Red", which I had on hand.



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Offline AlbaNY

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Re: A shop-built skate holder for sharpening with a Pro-Filer
« Reply #29 on: January 29, 2024, 01:23:57 PM »
CHALLENGE:
can you use a home shop to improvise your own home-made powered skate sharpening machine? Say, using a power tool to turn an off-the-shelf grinding wheel?

it seems to me you are part-way there. You've created a smooth track for the blade to run through, right? So, if you can find a precision way to align the wheel along the center of the track... Maybe use a drill press, or a drill stand, to adjust the distance??

I suspect the hardest to make component of a powered sharpening machines is the diamond dresser, that grinds the ROH curve across the wheel. One way to do this is to move a diamond tip along a circular trajectory against the wheel, while the wheel turns. The tip could be moved at the end of an adjustable length arm (effective arm length = ROH) - except that the center of rotation is inside the grinding wheel - in fact it is midway through the thickness of the wheel. The obvious way to make that work is that The arm rotates about a center that is offset at right angles to the side of the wheel (typically, the wheel is horizontal, and the rotation center is offset vertically above the wheel; the arm has to be parallel to the shaft the wheel rotates on), and an second extension, at right angles to the arm, holds the diamond point. I think there are other ways of doing that, but I haven't seen them in detail. (I like the idea of using right angles because it is easy to find pre-manufactured items with right angles in them.)

I wish you could ask the guy in Romania using the bench grinder holding the skates in his hands.  He definitely had a way to dress the wheel for ROH, but at the time I was not interested as now to pay attention to how.