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A little Stainless Steel work

mrdeepseafisher

Well-known member
Joined
Jan 15, 2012
Messages
283
Status
  1. OWNER - I own a Hatteras Yacht
Hatteras Model
53' YACHT FISH -Series I (1977 - 1981)
I've had trouble finding the stainless material to complete the boat work I'm doing (as well as someone to do it) so I thought I would have a go at polishing some stainless. I needed some 2 1/2" dia. pipes to hold up the dinghy supports and bought some stainless online but it was not polished. The pipes are 7ft long so I spent the weekend building a way to polish them by modifying my wood lathe. It ended up being just under ten feet long so I should be able to turn a 8ft. tube if needed. didn't really know what I was doing but the first piece turned out better than I hoped. Actually it was fun to work on something and see it turn out ok after about 6 hours. It took me six on the first pipe. The second one took only about fours hours.

turning machine.webp

I have a some very fine scratches that I think I can buff out after its on the boat.

finished pipe 2.webp

finished pipe.webp
 
Very Nice. Also like the setup in the shop.
 
A labor of love! Nothing finer or more relaxing then working with your hands. So how does one go about polishing stainless steel to such a fine shine?
 
Didn't know how to go about it really. The stainless guy doing work on the boat told me generally how to do this but he didn't want to polish anything. So I looked on YouTube and talked to a few other folks. Essentially its just a lot of sanding. I bought somethign called a scotch-brite wheel and it takes a lot of the rough surface off. There is a course, medium, and fine wheel. I found it best to just use the course wheel and then started using wet/dry sandpaper. i turned the lathe at about 800 RPMs and used wet/dry sandpaper. Sprayed on a bit of water every few minutes and sanded starting at 240, 320, 400, 600, 800, 1000, 1500, 2000. It really started to shine at about 600 grit.
 
this is how the pipe started out

raw pipe.webp
 
You're hired. Fantastic job.
 
i don't think I want to make my living doing this, but I will say its given me some ideas now that I have this figured out. its also nice to see something that is concrete and compete at the end of the day. I typically spend my days and weeks on the phone and email and have nothing to show at the end of the day.

I have a couple new ideas, like bigger and better fender holders. I don't like the wire ones we have, some stainless mounts for the kayaks in lieu of the bungee cords and a few other small projects.
 
I have experience repairing stainless steel molding for cars. Usually I'lll do as you did. But then I'll go to 3000 and then 5000 with 3M trizac paper on a da and a little water then a light buff. It will produce a mirror finish. I found that that you really need to pay attention to the scratches before moving to a finer grit otherwise it's a pain to get them out. Great job tho.
 
Outstanding job. I'm also impressed with your ingenuity with the lathe setup. I used to polish some rifle barrels like that years ago but we didn't actually need it to be quite as highly polished as you did. After polishing they went into a bluing tank. Posts like yours are what makes this forum so wonderful. Thanks

Walt
 
Played with the baseplates tonight, smaller pieces go a lot faster.
Got a before and after shot

Shot of post sitting on plate, just need to weld and clean it up
 

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My compass at the lower helm isn't that shiny. Darn, I've got to get to work!

Nice job!!

JN
 
If you want to buy it

http://www.mcmaster.com/


Terms and ConditionsHome|Help|Returns|Careers|Settings
Ultra-High-Polish Type 316/316L Stainless Steel Tubing
Temperature Range: -425° to 1500° F
Bend with a bending tool
Use with quick-clamp fittings
This premium-grade Type 316/316L stainless steel tubing is highly polished—use it with water, deionized water, air, dairy, hydraulic fluid, and anywhere surface contamination is a concern. It is manufactured to 3-A sanitary requirements and meets ASTM A269 and A270. Each piece is capped, put in a plastic sleeve, then sealed in a cardboard tube. Tubing has a Rockwell hardness of B90 and a soft (annealed) temper. It can be sterilized with steam (autoclaving) and gas.

Smooth—Meets ASME BPE (bioprocessing equipment). The ID is polished to a 20 Ra finish. The OD is polished to a 30 Ra finish.

Super Smooth—The ID is polished to a 10 Ra finish, except those with a 1 1/2" and larger tubing OD are polished to a 15 Ra finish. The OD is polished to a 30 Ra finish.
OD Wall ID OD
Tolerance Max. psi
@ 72° F 1 ft. 3 ft. 6 ft.
Smooth
1/2" 0.065" 0.37" ±0.005" 3,200 3334K74
$26.78
$68.29
$133.91
3/4" 0.065" 0.62" ±0.005" 2,300 3334K94
27.23
69.45
136.17
1" 0.065" 0.87" ±0.005" 1,700 3334K16
27.94
71.24
139.69
1 1/2" 0.065" 1.37" ±0.008" 1,100 3334K11
29.25
74.60
146.27
2" 0.065" 1.87" ±0.008" 860 3334K12
36.43
92.90
182.15
2 1/2" 0.065" 2.37" ±0.01" 690 3334K13
47.63
121.23
216.49
3" 0.065" 2.87" ±0.01" 570 3334K14
57.04
145.20
259.29
4" 0.083" 3.83" ±0.015" 550 3334K15
85.44
217.48
388.36
Super Smooth
1/4" 0.035" 0.18" ±0.005" 4,300 3334K21
59.83
83.76
119.66
3/8" 0.035" 0.305" ±0.005" 2,900 3334K22
61.93
89.60
131.76
1/2" 0.049" 0.402" ±0.005" 3,200 3334K23
73.79
103.66
175.69
3/4" 0.065" 0.62" ±0.005" 2,300 3334K24
80.69
143.94
218.09
1" 0.065" 0.87" ±0.005" 1,700 3334K25
87.39
177.90
312.11
1 1/2" 0.065" 1.37" ±0.008" 1,100 3334K26
64.54
157.15
280.62
2" 0.065" 1.87" ±0.008" 860 3334K27
69.82
169.99
303.56
2 1/2" 0.065" 2.37" ±0.01" 690 3334K28
112.37
273.59
488.56
3" 0.065" 2.87" ±0.01" 570 3334K29
137.14
333.89
596.24
4" 0.083" 3.83" ±0.015" 550 3334K31
177.90
355.80
773.47
Terms and ConditionsHome|Help|Returns|Careers|Settings
Ultra-High-Polish Type 316/316L Stainless Steel Tubing
 
I hope you can TIG that. Because it's too pretty for spatter.
 
That looks great!

I agree with Toolsntoys--you've really got to work up through the grits and remove all scratches before moving on to the next grit. I've only used up through 3000 on a DA then buffed out the rest. I didn't realize there was a 5000 grit paper.
 

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