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On behalf of Expert Village, I'm Terry, and I'm here to tell you today about building
a wrought iron fence. Okay, always stop your grinder on a piece of metal or a table. If
you sit there and let it spin while it's spinning you set it down it jumps off, just like that.
Okay, so I've removed the majority of the metal, so now I want to give it the finishing
touches with a lighter wheel. It's more like a sanding pad, multiple layers of sandpaper
put together. I want to take this down to give it a more natural look so it doesn't
look like it was welded. Notice I'm using the edge of the wheel to get down in the grooves,
and the Y of the branch of the vine. I'm not grinding flat. I'm getting down in there so
I can get the majority of that off. Okay, another way that I remove the be be's is to
take a file, just a file, and I sharpen the end on one edge, so that when I scrape the
be be's will just come flying off, or remove easily. You can also use the side to side
motion to get in between because obviously the grinder has a three inch wheel and doesn't
fit. So, it's a quick and effective way to remove all the excess gouges and be be's that
you might have.