Has anyone tried the Mirka Abranet sanding discs with the Festool ROS's? I noticed Infinity has them on sale now. Looking for feedback...
Charlie
Has anyone tried the Mirka Abranet sanding discs with the Festool ROS's? I noticed Infinity has them on sale now. Looking for feedback...
Charlie
I use Mirka sanding discs on my PC ROS. They work just fine. I buy them in boxes of 100 to reduce thh cost.
Lee Schierer
USNA '71
Go Navy!
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I use them on my Festool 125/3 and I'll never go back to regular sandpaper.
I use the Abranet Mesh nearly exclusively with my Festool RO125 and my ETS 150/3 on woodworking and for finish work. When I use up my stock of the Festool Rubin and Brilliant 2 I won't replace them with other than the Abranet Mesh.
"... for when we become in heart completely poor, we at once are the treasurers & disbursers of enormous riches."
WQJudge
I have some abranet 80g and some sort of pad to go between the ETS 125 him and loop and the abranet mesh, it really lasts a long time. I'm thinking about adding it to my drum sander.
"A good miter set up is like yoga pants: it makes everyone's butts look good." Prashun Patel
I'd like to know how it works out on the drum sander.
+1 on the Abranet. It's the only paper I use on Festool 125 and 150.
You do need to get the Mirka pad(It's not expensive and last a long time) that prevents you from wearing down Hook/Loop on the Festool pad.
Jim
i have it on my drum sander and it is the best media i have tried for that tool. My use on festool sanders (RO150 & ETS150) is mixed. they seem to work as well or better than the festool abrasives, they seem to last as long and the dust collection is even better but it is more fragile media - if you are sanding a panel with a dado or the edge of a board the mirka seems to tear pretty easily at the outside of the pad and the paper has to be tossed for that reason even though the abrasive is not degraded.
I will buy more but to me it will not replace entirely the 'old school' media
Brian
"Any intelligent fool can make things bigger or more complicated...it takes a touch of genius and a lot of courage to move in the opposite direction." - E.F. Schumacher
Similar to Erik. I use it for flat surfaces with my air sanders, but use a 3M disc (flexible but doesn't normally tear) for profiles or anywhere else the disk edges could get caught.
JR
Hell, I use them in my sanding block. I will never, ever, go back to sandpaper.
Paul
I have some 100 and 150 that's pretty decent. I don't notice any improvement in performance over good conventional paper (I'm partial to Indasa Rhynogrit), but it does last longer. However, I don't find sandpaper to be the expensive part of a project, so the longevity solves a problem that's not super huge for me.
Where I DO love it is for the dust collection. It's great for that.
I also think it's a huge win for sanding bowls, where I often have some aggressive sanding to do with an '80 grit gouge'. Here, the little 2" Abranet discs on a sanding mandrel are fast and last. This is where burning through paper is a nuisance, because it happens so darn fast.