Mini Air Grinder
Mini Air Grinder
![]() |
![]() DOTCO RIGHT ANGLE MINI AIR GRINDER US $89.95
|
![]() Mini 1 4 Air Die Grinder US $24.95
|
![]() 1 4 Air Mini Die Grinder AST1205 US $46.97
|
![]() MINI AIR DIE GRINDER WITH GRINDING STONES WRENCHES US $19.99
|
![]() Sunex International SX231B Mini Air Die Grinder 1 4 US $38.25
|
![]() Mini Air Die Grinder CPT876 US $77.87
|
![]() 1 4 Inch Mini Angle Air Die Grinder US $78.36
|
![]() Astro Pneumatic AP 1205 1 4 Air Mini Die Grinder US $81.65
|
Vaughan Grylls
Early Life
Vaughan Grylls was born in Newark, Nottinghamshire on 10 December 1943 to an Oxford-educated secondary school headmaster and his much younger wife, a former showgirl. He attended six different types of schools ranging from St Paul's Cathedral Choir School to Skegness Secondary Modern. He attended four art colleges - Nottingham, Wolverhampton, Goldsmiths' and the Slade School of Fine Art where he studied under the sculptors Reg Butler and Phillip King and the philosopher Richard Wollheim.
Pun-Sculptures
At Goldsmiths' College in 1968, Vaughan Grylls produced an exhibition of his first pun-sculptures each made from cardboard and called collectively 'Ludwig Wittgenstein's Palace of Pun'. He took this with him to the Slade and continued to make more pun-sculptures. His work was noticed at his final show in 1970 by Jasia Reichardt, art critic and assistant director of the Institute of Contemporary Arts (ICA). She offered Grylls his first gallery show in London. It was held at the ICA in October 1970 as one room in an exhibition entitled 'Ten Sitting Rooms'. Works shown by Grylls at the ICA included 'A Case for Wittgenstein' (two white suitcases on one of which he had scrawled brought this in Case and on the other screened a photograph of the first case with Case for Wittgenstein' by Vaughan Grylls printed underneath in large black letters) and 'The Wittgenstein Lectern' (a black and white sculpture shaped as a lectern with a spoof linguistic philosophy question and answer examination paper scrawled on the top in black felt pen e.g. Question: Why are words used? Answer: Philosofreasons. In October 1970 in the The Sunday Telegraph, the art critic Michael Shepherd described Grylls works as having 'delicious verbal wit.' In the October 1970 edition of Arts Review the art critic Peter Fuller made the prescient observation that Vaughan Grylls' work was 'poker-faced'. In November 1970 Grylls showed 'Headcase, Bookcase' at the Young Contemporaries which was held that year at the Royal Academy. Grylls work consisted of a life-sized photograph of himself lying in front of a spoof library with punning titles written on the spines of the books. 'Headcase, Bookcase' was awarded the Marlborough Gallery Prize. The following year Vaughan Grylls set up a pun-sculpture in the form of a one-person exhibition at the Greenwich Theatre Gallery. In The Guardian, the art critic Caroline Tisdall described it as 'an exhibition of an exhibition' further explaining that it included ' some critical judgment - 2 clever x 1/2 - and mock philosophical asides "Deep down most people are shallow' '. A visitor to the exhibition subsequently added in lipstick to that particular work, 'Well you should know'. This was not the first time the public had reacted to a Grylls pun-sculpture or used lipstick in doing so. In May 1970 a passer-by had torn off part of Grylls large work 'The Emperor's New Clothes' which was showing outside Euston Station as part of the Camden Festival. The object the passer-by removed could be seen as a leaf on one side, on which Grylls had written 'see overleaf' and a penis on the other. The passer-by left his name and address adding that he had vandalised Grylls work on the grounds of its decadence.' In July 1970 Vaughan Grylls showed a large bed-shaped sculpture in Paternoster Square as part of the City of London Festival. It was chosen by Peter Fuller who was organising the Festival's art exhibition. The bed-head consisted of a photo enlargement of a sugary love-scene copied from the magazine 'Womans Own'. At one end of the 'bedspread', made from a white plasticated sheet of wood, Grylls had written 'A Woman's Own Eye View of the World' and on the other 'A Woman's Eye-Level View of the World'. This provoked several responses in lipstick from women. In the Summer of 1971 Vaughan Grylls showed several life-sized photographs throughout Alexandra Palace as his contribution to the exhibition 'Art Spectrum'. The photographs consisted of Grylls standing in front of other artists' submitted work. Some of the works Grylls photographed were subsequently rejected which meant that there were artists who found their work rejected from the show yet a photograph of their work included with Grylls standing pointing at it. One artist, a Peruvian felt sufficiently affronted to state publicly that he would not hesitate to kill Grylls should he show up at the opening. Grylls stayed away.
The Gallery, 65a Lisson Street NW1
The Gallery had been set up in 1972 by fellow Slade graduate Nicholas Wegner. Before Grylls arrival, Wegner had been showing invented artists, a group of whom had been exhibited unwittingly at the ICA. Wegner invited Vaughan Grylls to show at The Gallery. The work Grylls exhibited in 1973 entitled 'An Indo-Chinese Punsculpture' was a large photo-mural commenting on the signing of the so-called Paris Peace Treaty. Although a pun-sculpture it marked Grylls return to overtly political subject matter, something he had not undertaken since 1964, when as a student at Wolverhampton he had constructed a 2.5 metre high fibreglass sculpture Ku Klux Klan as a response to the 1964 racially-charged General Election in that city.
After showing 'An Indo-Chinese Pun-Sculpture, Vaughan Grylls joined Nicholas Wegner as co-director of The Gallery. Together they travelled to the 7th Cologne Art Fair where Grylls photographed the commercial dealers operating in their temporary, standardised alleries. On their return Wegner and Grylls transformed the layout of The Gallery into one exactly mirroring those at Cologne. This design was to remain unchanged for the rest of The Gallery operating life. Grylls and Wegner first exhibition together consisted of a selection of the photographs taken at Cologne. Following this, 'Display exhibitions' were invented. These were based on a modular system of photo-stands and wall-based units. Subjects such as rug Abuse In Maine, he Floods in Egypt, ine, ontemporary Art, elfast In Art and hotography Hasselblad were shown. Thus The Gallery replaced the invented artist with no artist. Grylls stated later in a radio interview with Anthea Lahr broadcast on [[WBAI]] New York that bland corporate-style presentation, used for each and every show was inspired by my first visit to America in 1973 where I was impressed by The Kodak Galleries with their huge attention to presentation and none to content. In 1974-75 Grylls and Wegner invited other artists to collaborate by showing their works in the presentation format of The Gallery e.g. John Latham, Gerald Newman and Rita Donagh. Caroline Tisdall in The Guardian wrote of this period " The Gallery (65a Lisson Street NW1) continues its enterprising programme of processing and packaging. This has by now become the closest to a house style that any London gallery has, In 1975 Vaughan Grylls left The Gallery to return to working on his own while Wegner continued with Display exhibitions and other shows until 1978.
In 2006 The Centre of Attention re-presented a selection of radical galleries, publications and televisions shows covering the period 1956-2006 in a survey exhibition entitled 'Fast and Loose (my dead gallery)'. This was shown at the Fieldgate Gallery London at the same time as the Frieze Art Fair. The exhibition featured several enterprises from the period including the Indica Gallery , the Women's Art Library, Make, BANK and The Gallery. In 2007 in the art magazine Art on Paper, New York City, the art critic Sarah Andress wrote 'In one of two rooms dedicated to The Gallery (1972-78) hung six large photographs of other galleries' booths at the 1973 Cologne Kunstmarkt. after which the Gallery's directors remodeled their space. A book of photographs of Frieze 2006 sat on a table in that room, a subtle reminder of how truly prescient the Gallery's project really was.'
The River Chemical Company
In 1975 Vaughan Grylls, inherited responsibility for a small company in Nottingham specialising in selling chemicals and laboratory equipment. It had been established by his great uncle with a First World War invalid gratuity and had been in decline for at least 25 years. Vaughan Grylls changed its unfortunate title to River Scientific but his attempt to revitalize it was limited as the first Thatcher government was set on squeezing fragile companies as well as the unions. River Scientific was sold to its biggest creditor in 1981. Grylls said in 2005 he only positive elements for me was first in keeping the employees of River Scientific in jobs as long as possible and second in giving me some experience of running something. That became valuable when I started running art colleges.
Photo-collages
It is for his huge photo-collages on serious historical and political subjects that Vaughan Grylls is perhaps best known. Grylls attributed his change of emotional gear from pun-sculptures to these works to the death of his father in 1977. In 1978 he made agia Sophia Istanbul . It was constructed from myriads of tele-photo images joined together which revealed the whole interior of the building at one glance. Selected for exhibition by Nicholas Serota, at that time director of the Whitechapel Art Gallery, it was shown that year at the hitechapel Open. Grylls followed this in 1979 with he Wailing Wall Jerusalem in which a photograph was assigned to each ancient stone and then with the 8 metre wide n Flanders Fields, shown at the Whitechapel Open in 1980. In this, one of his most evocative works, the grid of gravestones and the grid of Grylls tele-photo images physically correlate and there is also an implied philosophical correlation between the passing of time, which he has captured by taking the photographs over several hours, and his subject matter. Grylls approach to his photo-collages could be generally regarded as analogous to that of a film-maker.
Perhaps his most remembered photo-collage is Site of the Assassination of President Kennedy (1980). In the British Journal of Photography of 5 February 1982, in which he describes his working method for several of his photo-collages, Vaughan Grylls wrote about this particular work:
studied the Warren Report on the assassination, in particular the photographs and plans of the assassination site. There was also the problem of the nknown assassin, not acknowledged in the Warren Commission report, but nevertheless a crucial element in the construction of the piece. After making, as usual, a large number of drawings and sketches, I set off for Dallas. I had decided to position the camera in Dealey Plaza, on the south side of Elm Street, and not far from where Joseph Zapruder, the amateur movie-maker happened to be standing when the President motorcade passed by and rifle shots were fired from a window in the top right hand corner of the Texas School Book Depository, a building I thought I could feature on the right hand side of my picture. Lee Harvey Oswald bullets struck Kennedy at a point that would become the left centre of my picture, and it is believed that a second assassin struck from the left of this an area referred to as the rassy knoll. The motorcade then raced off towards the far left of my picture. I positioned the tripod at an angle so that the camera carrying a 300mm lens swung through an arc that followed the line of Oswald bullets. Because an angle was set up from the right, another one was conversely set up from the left. This latter angle followed a line from the grassy knoll to where Kennedy sat in the back seat of his open-topped car with his wife Jackie, and the Governor of Texas. This line represented the line of the bullets fired by the assassin who escaped in the resulting confusion.
In February 1983, in The Observer, the art critic William Feaver, wrote about Grylls large Arnolfini Gallery exhibition iews of our Time: he sites Vaughan Grylls chooses for his elaborate photographic inspections are those where marked the spot. for where the Fuhrer stood, Oswald aimed, the boat exploded, the panic began. The inked cross that singles out one headstone among thousands in a war cemetery. Sometimes with Grylls acting like a deranged bill-sticker, his basic grid-pattern is disturbed. Whole areas tilt sideways or fan out and extra details, fitted into the gaps, add a kaleidoscopic element to the confusion. His iews of out Time are news story, relocation and news-gathering recombined.
The largest work Vaughan Grylls has made is his 24metre wide he Nuclear War Triptych of 1981-82. The art historian and critic Brandon Taylor writing in the art journal Aspects in 1984 said by 1980 various events had taken place in world politics to make nuclear war the most urgent overall question in the international arena. It was against this awesome background that Grylls began a large three-part work which constitutes a meditation on this system of tensions and a wry comment on our human fallibility. The left panel of this work is called uclear War in the UK. It was photographed at an England/Scotland Football match at Wembley. The right panel is called uclear War in the USA and it was photographed at Disneyland, California. Of this panel, Grylls said in an article published by the Arnolfini Gallery in 1983 I found Disneyland at once cheerful and sinister(there was) a jokey obsession with death, almost an attempt to exorcise it. I have tried to show people being swept into their own creation. The central panel is called achau Railway Station. ic Brandon Taylor wrote in Aspects in 1984, ompleted in 1982, it shows modern day commuters waiting for trains beneath the signs which, to the rest of the world, can only signify the place where abysmal atrocities were once performed. Grylls pictures himself in the work (12th frame from the right) wearing the bemused expression of someone who finds that the horrific events of forty years ago have already been covered over by the sands of time.
In April 1983, Artscribe described Grylls as n effective political artist who uses collage in much the same way as the collage-satirists of pre-War Germany, but without such sardonic humour. He is unremittingly straight-faced throughout, in works that might appear quirky but are unfailingly compelling.
The Grylls/ Hockney Controversy
By 1982 David Hockney was also constructing pictures from several photographic images. To massive media attention, Hockney declared that he himself had invented what he dubbed oiner' photography and in so doing had discovered a new way of seeing, in particular the ability to include the passing of time in one static work. Although by 1984, art critics such as Waldemar Januszczak writing in The Guardian had acknowledged 'Long before Hockney, Grylls was assembling powerful, single images out of myriads of smaller details' and John Spurling in the New Statesman had said Vaughan Grylls has been at it for longer and ockney genius for composition makes his work more immediately appealing but his content is characteristically superficial an ad-man view of the world. Grylls is heavier on both counts: he plods rather too squarely over his space, but he takes on much more ambitious subjects', Hockney's long-established fame and formidable media machine meant that to those outside the art world a Vaughan Grylls could now be regarded simply as an imitation of a David Hockney oiner. Grylls issued a statement in Art Monthly in January 1984. aughan Grylls would like to say that he does not feel that David Hockney has intentionally copied his work. Whether his decision to do so was influenced by this controversy or not, in August 1984 at the height of his reputation, Grylls left England for America to accept an offer made by Williams College Massachusetts to set up and run a new department of Photography and Video. Yet comparison with Hockney would follow Grylls across the Atlantic. At an extensive retrospective of his work held at the Elvehjem Museum of Art, (now the Chazen Museum of Art) University of Wisconsin in 1985/6, the art critic Robert Silberman wrote in Art in America , rylls reveals a concern with public life that makes the murals function something like history painting. His public themes set Grylls work off clearly from the photographic collages of David Hockney, whatever the superficial resemblance. Hockney, in playing Cubist with a camera, is more concerned with private, individual; experience, shying away from the larger social issues Grylls confronts.
Art School Administrator
In 1989 Grylls returned to the UK to become Head of Art & Design at Wolverhampton Polytechnic, later the University of Wolverhampton where he oversaw the growth of the School from 400 to 1200 students. In 1996 he became director of the Kent Institute of Art & Design (KIAD) made up of the well-known Canterbury, Maidstone and Rochester art colleges which together had 2700 and 600 staff. Alumni include the fashion designers Zandra Rhodes, Karen Millen and Wendy Dagworthy, the graphic designer Martin Lambie-Nairn and the artists Humphrey Ocean and Tracey Emin.
In 2003, as government legislation now allowed it, Grylls proposed creating a new university of 6000+ students studying art, design, and architecture by merging the Kent Institute with the Surrey Institute of Art & Design. He did this he said, to prevent these art colleges eventually becoming absorbed into their local universities which is what had happened in the past to most art colleges in the country. The merged institution was called the University College for the Creative Arts at Canterbury, Epsom, Farnham, Maidstone & Rochester. (since 2009 the more reasonably-titled University for the Creative Arts.) As soon as the merger was completed in August 2005, Grylls as founding Chief Executive resigned to return full time to his own work after a break of twenty years. He became an emeritus professor of the new university in 2006. In September 2008, in a letter in Art Monthly responding to an article published in the previous edition criticising the management of the university since his departure, Grylls wished the university well but said that there had been a dispute between himself and the institution which he had decided to resolve by leaving in 2005. He added that in any case he had found it intolerable that the pressures of the merger had taken him away entirely from his own work.
Recent Events
In October 2006 Vaughan Grylls and Nicholas Wegner (now known as Nicholas James) exhibited a selection of works from The Gallery in 'Fast and Loose (my dead gallery) at the Fieldgate Gallery London in an exhibition organised by the Centre of Attention.
In April 2007 Vaughan Grylls exhibited Places that Shaped Today's Middle East at the Old Truman Brewery, Brick Lane, London E1. The works were constructed from photographs Grylls had taken the year before whilst travelling in the Levant. Although digital they echoed his long-established style of work.
In February 2009 Grylls broke new ground in his working style in a one person exhibition held at Sadler Wells called other. The exhibition consisted of ten yper-real life-sized photographic portraits of women his mother had admired. In an article published in Time Out London on February 12 2009 about this exhibition, the art critic Helen Sumpter, quoted Grylls as saying " I'm an emerging artist all over again. But I'm no YBA (Young British Artist) I'm an EVOBA - an Emerging Very Old British Artist".
In November 2009, a mini-retrospective of Grylls's work from 1964 to 2009 was exhibited at Nomad Galleries, 55 St James's Street, London SW1.
In February 2010 Grylls exhibited own Under, at the Chelsea Arts Club London. It consisted of six new works resulting from a round-the-world trip in 2009.
Public Collections
Arts Council of Wales; Contemporary Arts Society; Kwazulu Natal Technikon, South Africa; Mark Twain Bank, St Louis; Museum of Modern Art Library, New York; National Museum of Media, Bradford; Pfizer Research, Sandwich; Polaroid, Boston; Unilever; University of Greenwich; University of Roehampton; The Open University; Williams College Massachusetts.
Selected References
Myfanwy Kitchin The Guardian London 27 February 1970
Ten Sitting Rooms. Exhibition catalogue edited by Jasia Reichardt and published by the Institute of Contemporary Arts, London October 1970
Caroline Tisdall, The Guardian London 8 February 1970
Vaughan Grylls Case in Point, The Sunday Times London 28 March 1971
This is not an advertisement, Studio International London, Vol 182 no 935 July/August 1971
Vaughan Grylls, enefitting from a Holiday, The Sunday Times London 29 August 1971
John A Walker, ontemporary Art, Flash Art Milan, nos 48/49 October/November 1974
ime, Words and the Camera Exhibition catalogue edited by Jasia Reichardt and published by Neue Galerie am Landesmuseum Joanneum Graz, Austria 1976
Vaughan Grylls, rtists Thoughts on the 70 in Words and Pictures Studio International London vol 195 no 991 1981
Waldemar Januszczak, The Guardian 6 January 1981
Richard Cork, The Standard London 22 January 1981
Brandon Taylor, Introductory essay to he Panoramic Image exhibition catalogue published by John Hansard Gallery, University of Southampton 1981
Vaughan Grylls Essay on Working Methods The British Journal of Photography February 1981
aughan Grylls. Views of Our Time. Exhibition catalogue with notes by the artist an introductory essay by Brandon Taylor published by The Arnolfini Gallery Bristol January 1983
William Feaver, The Observer London 6 February 1983
Martin Holman, Artscribe London no 40 April 1983
Brandon Taylor Aspects Newcastle-upon-Tyne rt Against Conflict: the Photocollages of Vaughan Grylls Spring 1984
aughan Grylls. Through the Looking Glass Exhibition catalogue with notes by the artist and an introductory essay by John Carlin Published by the University of Wisconsin Elvehjem Museum of Art Madison Wisconsin November 1985
Robert Silberman Art in America New York March 1986
Philip Core The Independent London 16 December 1988
aughan Grylls. Wolverhampton Return Exhibition catalogue with notes by the artist and an introductory essay by Christopher Bailey. Published jointly by Wolverhampton Art Gallery September 1989
aughan Grylls. White Man Tales Exhibition catalogue with notes by the artist and an introductory essay by Professor Ann H Murray Published by Wheaton College Massachusetts November 1995
Helen Sumpter 'In the Studio -Vaughan Grylls' , Time Out London, February 12-18 2009
Vaughan Grylls lives in London and Kent and is married to the publisher Polly Powell, daughter of the architect, Geoffry Powell of Chamberlin, Powell and Bon. They have two children, Hattie, born 1992 and George, born 1994. He was married previously to the artist and theatre designer Gillian Daniell and their daughter is the film-maker Pinny Grylls, born 1978. His son-in-law is the actor Sam Crane, born 1979. His brother is the Oxford academic and Sunday Times and Times Literary Supplement contributing book critic, David Grylls.
External links
Vaughan Grylls
Categories: 1943 births | Living people | English artists | Conceptual artists | British educators | Academics of the University of WolverhamptonHidden categories: Articles lacking in-text citations from January 2010 | All articles lacking in-text citations
About the Author
I am China Quality Dress writer, reports some information about lock picking set , air angle grinder.
|
|
Mini Air Die Grinder $89.95 ? Compact, lightweight design for easy maneuverability ? Lock off throttle to prevent accidental start up ? Complete with 1/4'' and 6mm collet ? Built in regulator to match speed to the job ? Applications: high speed blending, smoothing porting and deburring in confined areas ? Free Speed: 28000 rpm Specifications: Collet/Spindle Size in.: 1/4 Weight lb.: 3/4 Length in.: 4-3/4 Average Air Consumption CFM: 4 Air Inlet NPTF in.: 1/4 Free Speed rpm: 28000 By Chicago Pneumatic. |
|
|
Mini Angle Air Die Grinder $81.95 ? Compact, lightweight design for easy maneuverability ? Lock off throttle to prevent accidental start up ? 90 degree angle head allows flexibility in tight quarters ? Complete with 1/4'' and 6mm collet ? Applications: high speed blending, smoothing, porting and deburring in confined areas ? Free Speed: 21000 rpm Specifications: Collet/Spindle Size in.: 1/4 Weight lb.: 1 Length in.: 4-7/8 Average Air Consumption CFM: 4 Air Inlet NPTF in.: 1/4 Free Speed rpm: 21000 By Chicago Pneumatic. |
|
|
Mini Air Die Grinder - 1/4'' $28.95 ? Collet size 1/4'' ? 25,000 RPM ? Front exhaust keeps grinding surface clean for visibility ? Built-in air inlet allows for greater access in restricted areas ? Safety lever throttle for positive speed control ? Built-in speed regulator ? Ball bearing construction for long tool lifeBy Sunex International. |
|
|
Mini Angle 1/4'' Air Die Grinder $145.95 ? When a straight grinder isn't practical for working in confined areas, this is the tool to use. It's compact and well designed for grinding, porting, polishing, deburing, and breaking sharp edges. ? Durable and long lasting ? All ball bearing construction ? Precision-machined steel gears ? Positive grip 1/4'' capacity collet chuck ? Self locking throttle lever Specifications: Free speed: 18,000 rpm Weight: .97 lb. (.47 kg) Length: 5'' (127 mm) Average air consumption: 3 cfm, @ load 12 cfm Sound (pressure/power): 98.4/111.4 dBA Rated power: .33 hp Collet size: 1/4'' Air inlet: 1/4''By Ingersoll-Rand. |
|
|
Mountain MTN7353 2 Inch Mini Angle Grinder $116.8 Features and Benefits Grinder has rubber sleeve handle to reduce vibration; rib textured handle provides a firm grip and features a safety throttle lever Side exhaust offers the best motor efficiency and no lubricants needed Heavy duty alloy air motor Guard and 2 grinding wheels (60 and 80 grit) included Compact and lightweightMountain 2 inch Mini Angle Grinder features the best of the heavy duty grinder models in a small compact package. |
|
|
1/4' Air Mini Die Grinder Collect Tool 25000 RPM $36.99 Description:This 1/4" Die Grinder feature self-locking throttle levers designed to prevent accidental starting.Giving you excellent speed control, and include all bearing construction for the utmost in durability.The Die Grinder Tool is compact and made of metal, anti-slip for easy to handle.Ball bearing construction for durability.Precision machined gearing delivers maximum power transfer.You can use the Air Die Grinder for grinding, edge breaking, deburring, porting, and polishing.Speed (rpm): 25,000Collet size: 1/4"Air inlet: ( n.p.t.): 1.4"Air pressure: 6.5kg/m2Size: 12.2 x 3.2cmWeight: 441gComes with two wrench |
|
|
Campbell Hausfeld TL1120 Mini Die Grinder $19.99 Mini Die Grinder - TL1120 |
|
|
Chicago Pneumatic CPT7562 90 Degree Mini Air Die Grinder $145.65 Features and Benefits Powerful .25HP High Performance Motor for power in all types of grinding conditions Compact size with insulated handle grip for added comfort in all conditions 23 000 RPM of Maximum Speed Easy Access Speed Regulator for precise power control Rear Exhaust keeps air away from work area90 Degree Mini Die Grinder with Insulated Handle Grip Powerful .25 HP High Performance Motor and 23 000 RPM of Maximum Speed. Also features easy access speed regulator rear exhaust and lock off throttle. Collet size: 1/4 ; Air inlet: 1/4 |
|
|
Campbell-hausfeld Campbell-hausfeld Mini Die Grinder TL052099AV $24.68 Mini die grinder Air tool die grinder has oversized hex nut for easy bit replacement using standard open ended wrenches Easy-to-use 25,000 RPM provides the speed for grinding, porting, smoothing, polishing, and deburring Easy-to-grip soft grip for increased comfort Kit includes air die grinder, (4) grinding stones, (2) collet wrenches, 1/4? steel Male plug, and blow molded case 1/4? NPT air inlet, 6.2 SCFM at 90 P.S.I Brand #: Campbell-Hausfeld TL052099AV UPC: 045564589301 Keywords: grinder die mini |
|
|
Standard Duty Mini Air Die Grinder $64.95 ? Part of the expanded line of economical, standard duty, die grinders, the IR 307A combines performance and versatility in a lightweight, compact package. It can be used with all types of accessories for porting, weld breaking, and smoothing sharp edges... as well as deburring, polishing, and grinding. ? Superior maneuverability ? Standard 1/4'' collet for all types of accessories ? Safety lever prevents accidental starts ? Front exhaust helps keep work surface clean ? Versatile and reliable Specifications: Free speed: 27,000 rpm Weight: .69 lb. (.31 kg) Length: 4.75'' (121 mm) Average air consumption: 3 cfm, @ load 14 cfm Sound (pressure/power): 84.7/97.7 dBA Rated power: .25 hp Collet size: 1/4'' Air inlet: 1/4''By Ingersoll-Rand. |
|
|
IngersollRand IR 302A Mini Angle .25Air Die Grinder $159.12 When a straight grinder isn t practical for working in confined areas this is the tool to use. It s compact and well designed for grinding porting polishing deburing and breaking sharp edges. Durable and long lasting. All ball bearing construction. Precisionmachined steel gears. Positive grip 1/4 capacity collet chuck. Self locking throttle leverSpecifications:Free speed: 18 000 rpmWeight: .97 lb. (.47 kg)Length: 5 (127 mm)Average air consumption: 3 cfm load 12 cfmSound (pressure/power): 98.4/111.4 dBARated power: .33 hpCollet size: 1/4 Air inlet: 1/4 |
|
|
Replacement Work Surface For Mini Grinder $13.95 Replacement Work Surface for the Gryphette Grinder 84180 and Delphi EZPro Grinder EZ01. |
|
|
1/4'' Mini Right Angle Air Die Grinder Kit $86.95 ? 20,000 RPM ? Safety throttle lever ? Ball bearing construction for long tool life ? Includes: SUN SX264 Die Grinder; 2 spanner wrenches, 1/8'' (3mm) collet; 5 pc. 1/8'' (3mm) shank grinding stones, 5 pc. 1/4'' (6mm) shank grinding stones; 1 each, 2'' & 3'' roll lock backing pad; 4 each 2'' & 3'' roll lock surface prep discs; Blow mold case.By Sunex International. |
|
|
1/4'' Mini Right Angle Air Die Grinder $57.95 ? Collet size 1/4'' ? 90 degree angle head ? Built-in speed regulator ? Safety throttle lever for positive speed control ? Ball bearing construction for long tool life ? 20,000 RPM free speed.By Sunex International. |
|
|
Chicago Pneumatic Mini Air Die Grinder. Each $68.27 Manufacturer: Chicago Pneumatic. Each. Features Benefits: Compact, lightweight design for easy maneuverability Lock off throttle to prevent accidental start up Complete with 1/4" and 6mm collet Built in regulator to match speed to the job Applications: |
|
|
307A - Air Mini Die Grinder-Std $67.01 [383-307A] UPC: 66302300510 1.5 LB |
|
|
Chicago Pneumatic CPT876 Mini Air Die Grinder $98.26 Features and Benefits: Compact lightweight design for easy maneuverabilityLock off throttle to prevent accidental start upComplete with 1/4 and 6mm colletBuilt in regulator to match speed to the jobApplications: high speed blending smoothing porting and deburring in confined areasFree speed: 28000 rpmModel 876 collet/ spindleSize: 1/4 6mmAvg.air consumption: 4 CFMAir inlet NPTF: 1/4 Min. hose size: 3/8 10mm |
|
|
Cuisinart SmartStick Mini-Prep Chopper /Grinder Attachment $20 SmartStick Mini-Prep Chopper/Grinder Attachment for CSB-55N |
|
|
Grinder $8.99 Grinder |
|
|
Campbell Hausfeld PL154199 Mini Angle Die Grinder $44.99 Mini Angle Die Grinder - PL154199. 1/4-in Collet. 1/8-in Collet |
|
|
Astro Pneumatic AST1205 1/4 Inch Air Mini Die Grinder $56.38 Features and Benefits: Composite handle to reduce vibrations Rib texture handle provides a firm grip Lever throttle for feathering control Compact and light weight Builtin regulator Front exhaustSpecifications:Collet size: 1/4 25 000 RPM 5 Overall length 1/2 Lb. net weight 1/3 HP motor 1/4 Air inlet 3/8 Hose 3 CFM air consumption 90120 PSI air pressure |
|
|
Campbell Hausfeld TL052099 1/4-in Air Die Grinder with Case $21.99 1/4-in Air Die Grinder - TL52099. Carrying Case |
|
|
JET JSM-5430 1/4-in Low Speed Air Die Grinder $189 1/4-in Low Speed Air Die Grinder - JSM-5430 |
|
|
JET 526340 AG-4S, 4-in Industrial Air Angle Grinder $439 4-in Industrial Air Angle Grinder - 526340 |
|
|
Factory Reconditioned Campbell Hausfeld TL054100RB 1/4-in Air Die Grinder Kit $59.99 1/4-in Air Die Grinder - TL054100RB. Storage Case |
|
|
Factory Reconditioned Campbell Hausfeld TL052000RB 1/4-in Air Die Grinder with Case $17.99 1/4-in Air Die Grinder - TL52099. Carrying Case |
|
|
JET JSM-532 1/4-in 25,000 RPM Air Die Grinder $59.99 1/4-in 25,000 RPM Air Die Grinder - JSM-532 |
|
|
Chicago Pneumatic Mini 90 Degree Air Die Grinder $133.95 Powerful .25HP High Performance Motor for power in all types of grinding conditions Compact size with insulated handle grip for added comfort in all conditions 23,000 RPM of Maximum Speed Easy Access Speed Regulator for precise power control Rear Exhaust keeps air away from work area |
|
|
Ingersoll-Rand Standard Duty Mini Air Die Grinder $56.23 Part of the expanded line of economical, standard duty, die grinders, the IR 307A combines performance and versatility in a lightweight, compact package. It can be used with all types of accessories for porting, weld breaking, and smoothing sharp edges. As well as deburring, polishing, and grinding. Superior maneuverability Standard 1/4 inch collet for all types of accessories Safety lever prevents accidental starts Front exhaust helps keep work surface clean Versatile and reliable Specifications: Free speed: 27,000 rpm Weight: 69 lb. (. 31 kg) Length: 4. 75 inch (121 mm) Average air consumption: 3 cfm, load 14 cfm Sound (pressure/power): 84. 7/97. 7 dBA Rated power: 25 hp Collet size: 1/4 inch Air inlet: 1/4 inch |
|
|
IngersollRand IR 307A Standard Duty Mini Air Die Grinder $69.02 Part of the expanded line of economical standard duty die grinders the IR 307A combines performance and versatility in a lightweight compact package. It can be used with all types of accessories for porting weld breaking and smoothing sharp edges... as well as deburring polishing and grinding. Superior maneuverability. Standard 1/4 collet for all types of accessories. Safety lever prevents accidental starts. Front exhaust helps keep work surface clean. Versatile and reliableSpecifications:Free speed: 27 000 rpmWeight: .69 lb. (.31 kg)Length: 4.75 (121 mm)Average air consumption: 3 cfm load 14 cfmSound (pressure/power): 84.7/97.7 dBARated power: .25 hpCollet size: 1/4 Air inlet: 1/4 |
|
|
Buffalo Tools Air Die Grinder $51.7 This air die grinder is perfect for sanding or polishing jobs. Use different head attachments with this air die grinder for different sanding grains.0.25-inch air die grinderDimensions: 8 inches long x 2 inches wide x 3 inches highCan sand or polish several materials like metal, wood or plastic |


US $114.99


















































































