I've seen a couple of videos where Sedge was talking about extractor pressure as it relates to sanding. My take is that Sedge recommends setting the extractor to the lowest setting to "break surface tension." I really don't know what this means truly. I just have been following along in the vein that others know better than I do.
This summer, when I was using a friends ETS EC 150/5 connected to a Rigid vac, I did notice some swirls (after finishing, of course). This I've been attributing to "too much" suction and have been keeping my own CT MIDI I on the lowest setting. But is there anything "bad" about this?
I'm wondering because I've been rough sanding (P40 Rubin 2) some 3/4 underlayment plywood that has been out in the elements for the past six months and it's covered in dirt, grime and kinda black oxidized. I've been sanding it just to clean that off. My plan is to use the ply to make rolling carts for shop equipment and then stain it dark so you really won't notice imperfections. I'm using my ETS EC 150/3 but have noticed if I pump up the vac to Full Blast, it will remove the grime a bit more quickly. Are the downsides of this (full blast) mainly swirl marks (which would be unsuitable for fine sanding)?
Thanks!
This summer, when I was using a friends ETS EC 150/5 connected to a Rigid vac, I did notice some swirls (after finishing, of course). This I've been attributing to "too much" suction and have been keeping my own CT MIDI I on the lowest setting. But is there anything "bad" about this?
I'm wondering because I've been rough sanding (P40 Rubin 2) some 3/4 underlayment plywood that has been out in the elements for the past six months and it's covered in dirt, grime and kinda black oxidized. I've been sanding it just to clean that off. My plan is to use the ply to make rolling carts for shop equipment and then stain it dark so you really won't notice imperfections. I'm using my ETS EC 150/3 but have noticed if I pump up the vac to Full Blast, it will remove the grime a bit more quickly. Are the downsides of this (full blast) mainly swirl marks (which would be unsuitable for fine sanding)?
Thanks!