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  2. Grinding wheel - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Grinding_wheel

    Grinding wheels are self-sharpening to a small degree; for optimal use they may be dressed and trued by the use of wheel or grinding dressers. Dressing the wheel refers to removing the current layer of abrasive, so that a fresh and sharp surface is exposed to the work surface. Trueing the wheel makes the grinding surface parallel to the ...

  3. Tyrolit - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tyrolit

    Tyrolit was cofounded on February 13, 1919, by Daniel Swarovski to manufacture grinding wheels for the production of Swarovski crystals. During World War I, the Swarovski Group was cut off from supplies of grinding wheels, and was thus forced to develop and produce its own grinding wheels.

  4. Disc cutter - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Disc_cutter

    This tool is very similar to an angle grinder, chop saw, or even a die grinder, with the main difference being the cutting disc itself (a circular diamond blade, or resin-bonded abrasive cutting wheel for a disc cutter vs. an abrasive grinding wheel for an angle grinder). This tool is highly efficient at cutting very hard materials, especially ...

  5. Noritake - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Noritake

    Other products currently manufactured by Noritake, also derived from its core tableware manufacturing technologies, include thick film circuit substrates, engineering ceramics, ceramic powder, and vacuum fluorescent displays, [8] as well as heating furnaces and kilns, mixing technology, filtration systems, and cutting and grinding machines. [9]

  6. Abrasive - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Abrasive

    Assorted grinding wheels as examples of bonded abrasives. A grinding wheel with a reservoir to hold water as a lubricant and coolant. A bonded abrasive is composed of an abrasive material contained within a matrix, although very fine aluminium oxide abrasive may comprise sintered material.

  7. Norton Abrasives - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Norton_Abrasives

    Norton Company was founded in 1885 by a group of ceramists and entrepreneurs from Worcester, Massachusetts. The group set out to manufacture the first mass-produced, precision-made grinding wheel to fulfill the burgeoning U.S. manufacturing industry's growing need for abrasives. [1] In 1990 it was purchased by Saint-Gobain of France.

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