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Author Topic: Scotch Brite pads  (Read 1280 times)

RCKYURWLD

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Scotch Brite pads
« on: February 22, 2005, 02:14:43 PM »
Does anyone know the correct finish that these pads will give you?

I use them with clean and dull on the spinner

i.e. Green = 400 finish,  Maroon = 800, Gray = 1200  

I used a gray pad on my GP2 and it has a slight gloss to it. It would be helpful to know what the true finish is for each color pad.

Anyone?
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RCKYURWLD
Cleveland, Ohio

Cleveland Rocks, Track Rolls - The Rule RULES!!

Rule GP2
Animal 2
Rule   2
Mutant
Super Freak
Thrash
Freak Out
Track Magic
Sugar Ray Glove spare ball

 

MI 2 AZ

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Re: Scotch Brite pads
« Reply #1 on: February 22, 2005, 10:34:00 PM »
http://www.ballreviews.com/Forum/Replies.asp?TopicID=74110&ForumID=16&CategoryID=5


SCOTCHBRITE GRIT CHART (courtesy of Charlest)
3M Scotch Brite Nylon Pads:
7445 - White pad, called Light Duty Cleansing - (1000) 1200-1500 grit
7448 - Light Grey, called Ultra Fine Hand - (600-800) 800 grit.
6448 - Green (?), called Light Duty Hand Pad - (600) 600 grit
7447 - Maroon pad, called General Purpose Hand - (320-400) 320 grit
6444 - Brown pad, called Extra Duty Hand - (280-320) 240 grit
7446 - Dark Grey pad, called Blending Pad (180-220) 150 grit
7440 - Tan pad, called Heavy Duty Hand Pad - (120-150) 60(?)
Green Scotch Brite is available EVERYWHERE. It's 600 grit.
Blue Scotch-Brite is considered to be about 1000 grit.
(The value inside the parentheses is directly from 3M.)
3M Chart
Less Aggressive --------> More Aggressive
7445 7448 6448 7447 6444 7446 7440
Finer Finish --------> Coarser Finish

TRIZACT GRIT CHART (Courtesy of Charlest)
A long while back when this confusion first arose I sent an email query to 3M who invented Trizact and manufactures it. This is their answer:
To extrapolate the micron to grit conversion from 3M:
A35 ~ 35 micron ~ 360 grit,
A10 ~ 10 micron ~ 1100 grit
A5 ~ 5 micron ~ 1600 grit
Trizact and micron(u) grading are two separate things. Trizact products
are graded on their own scale ranging from A6 - A160.
3M Superabrasives are micron graded, that is, measuring the average size
of an individual particle on that product.
Standard abrasive grading is based on the screen mesh used to separate
out the particles for a particle grade. In simplest terms, in a 1"
line of grade 24 product there are ~24 particles. In a 1" line of
grade 600 product there are ~600 particles.
In comparison, 9u=1200 grit, 15u=600, 20u=500, 30u=400, 40u=320
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I just want 2C was'zzub.
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I am the SGT Schultz of bowling.
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ABC/USBC Lifetime Member since Aug 1995.

RCKYURWLD

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Re: Scotch Brite pads
« Reply #2 on: February 24, 2005, 06:05:40 PM »
Thanks a million for that info.

I use these strictly with clean and dull on the spinner to clean my dull stuff.
--------------------
RCKYURWLD
Cleveland, Ohio

Cleveland Rocks, Track Rolls - The Rule RULES!!

Rule GP2
Animal 2
Rule   2
Mutant
Super Freak
Thrash
Freak Out
Track Magic
Sugar Ray Glove spare ball