Abralon Sanding Pads

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KenV

Member
Joined
Oct 28, 2005
Messages
4,720
Location
Juneau, Alaska.
David -- abralon is related to abranet abrasive but is on a foam backed sheet.

I use it with hand an power sanding for acrylics and built up finishes. Final polishing and it is done.

I have not tried to run cost comparisons because I use it for handy operations and fast results. I get consistent results quick and tend to use it wet.

I do let it dry and clean it with a toothbrush with the dust collector running.

It is not my first choice to level CA finishes, but does polish them up nicely.

I normally begin using it about 360 grit and go to 4K
 

crokett

Member
Joined
Dec 4, 2012
Messages
610
Location
Mebane, North Carolina

First, I did do a search. Second, the title of your first link is Abranet, not Abralon. I was given Abranet as a gift 2 Christmases ago and need to replace it. Third, the last 2 links also discussed Abranet, not Abralon, at least on the first 2 pages. When I did my seearch I didn't read them past that. The rest of the very long list of results searching for Abralon did not mention it in the title of the thread or in the first few posts, so I skipped thouse.

Thanks for the help though.
 

crokett

Member
Joined
Dec 4, 2012
Messages
610
Location
Mebane, North Carolina
Thanks Ken. I may hold off on it then. I have some micromesh pads that I use wet for acrylics and when I do CA finishes on wood. I don't sand wood wet. The dust gets in the grain of the wood and is hard to get out. It just seemed easier to keep 3 or 4 pads on hand than lots of sandpaper grits.
 

KenV

Member
Joined
Oct 28, 2005
Messages
4,720
Location
Juneau, Alaska.
It can be used dry -- just use a light touch and avoid heating it -- clean it often and the life is very good.

I have been using it instead of MM for the last 6 months of so because it is handy. I have the backs that stick to Velcro and it fastens to the tool holder next to the lathe nicely.
 

bobleibo

Member
Joined
Mar 15, 2007
Messages
2,130
Location
Utah

First, I did do a search. Second, the title of your first link is Abranet, not Abralon. I was given Abranet as a gift 2 Christmases ago and need to replace it. Third, the last 2 links also discussed Abranet, not Abralon, at least on the first 2 pages. When I did my seearch I didn't read them past that. The rest of the very long list of results searching for Abralon did not mention it in the title of the thread or in the first few posts, so I skipped thouse.

Thanks for the help though.


Don't EVER feel hesitant about asking a question. That is how most of learned many of the things we use today AND ARE HAPPY TO PASS THEM ALONG. Many times I have asked a question and had someone point me toward a previously written article or thread that I did not find. The difference was that they did it NICELY which I always appreciated and have always tried to pay it forward when I could.
Have a great day !!!!
 

wwneko

Member
Joined
Jul 21, 2014
Messages
215
Location
APO, AP
David, I use Abralon often, on flat work for smoothing/rubbing out the finish, I pop it on a random orbit polisher or random orbit sander and go to town. I like it because it's foam backed and smooths over inperfections creating a really even sheen. It's cutting properties are similar to abranet, as far as cutting fast and lasting a long time. For pen turning I'd stick with abranet and micro mesh combo.
 
Joined
Dec 27, 2010
Messages
121
Location
Plano Texas
For bare wood, don't use Abralon, use Abranet or Mirka Gold, or whatever sandpaper is your choice.

Abralon is a great product in the right situation. If you are turning resin or stabilized blanks, works well, but the gaps in grits can be troublesome. Abralon is only available in 180,360, 500, 1000, 2000, 3000, 4000. So with wood, it jumps too far. You don't want to skip that much space in the grits. For sandpaper it would be more like 80,120,180,240, 320, 400, 600, 800, 1000. Those are in P grit like Mirka products are graded.

For CA finish, it would be fine, but somewhat of an overkill (overspend).
Abranet only goes up to 1000, which is fine if you are using a polish after 1000. You could use Abralon 2K-4K afterwards with better results that polish only, but I would recommend wet sanding since it can be heat sensitive.

Under full disclosure, I am a Mirka dealer. And while I don't sell Abralon sheets, that price does seem quite expensive, I sell a 3"disk set of 360-4000 grit for $13. I find the 180 a bit of a waste when any sandpaper will do at that grit.

Although one of the benefits of Abralon is that since it is a different scratch pattern, you can sand to 400 with "normal" sandpaper and then hit it with 500 Abrasion and see all the scratched you have left behind, kind of revealing.
 
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