Quote from: wootz on November 02, 2015, 04:28:28 PM
sleepydad,
Wouldn't grading a stone put a lot of wear on the diamond plate?
I've always thought it's the shortest way to ending life of your diamond plate.
Shapton produces a lapping plate for stones by fusing diamonds in the glass,
and DMT produces Dia-Flat Lapping Plate by special technology for flattening water stones,
but regular diamond plates are not designed to withstand the extreme conditions incurred when flattening other abrasives.
A quote from the DMT website:
"Some DMT Diamond Sharpeners could be used (and have been used) for flattening, however, they were designed for sharpening, not flattening, therefore, DMT assumes no liability for sharpening stones worn out due to this method of use."
Personally, once I tried flattening an Arkansas benchstone with an EZE-LAP diamond plate, which stripped off a good deal of the diamond coating.
And Ken was through something similar: "I recently almost ruined a two hundred dollar diamond flat plate truing my grandfather's carborundum bench stone. That was really dumb." http://forum.tormek.com/index.php?topic=2337.msg11363#msg11363
Your DMT plates, do they show much wear from grading the Tormek stone 'for years'?
I was concerned about it at first but I don't even think about it anymore. I'm sure I will wear them out at some point but I have really beat on them and they continue to produce results so...
yes I know I'm outside the recommended usage.
I have only used the DMT plates to grade. so I can't answer for other diamond plates. I also have the shapton lapping plate and I don't think I would use it to grade on the tormek.
I know they now make smaller version of the plates and they are really very reasonable $ wise. the 6" plates are much cheaper as well.
http://www.amazon.com/DMT-D4F-Dia-Sharp-Continuous-Diamond/dp/B002D4K90M/ref=sr_1_31?s=power-hand-tools&ie=UTF8&qid=1446488501&sr=1-31&refinements=p_89%3ADMT+%28Diamond+Machining+Technology%29
if I wear mine out I will purchase some others in smaller sizes.
after a couple of years my finest plate definitively does not produce results as well as it once did. still I'm amazed at the beating they have taken.
I do want to make it clear that I don't run a commercial shop so I don't have any idea if you could do what I'm doing on a daily basis and get a good service life out of the diamond plates. I sharpen quite a bit... maybe ever other weekend 2-3 chisels, a couple of plane blades, some scissors, some knifes.