• Win a Free Custom Engraved Brass Coin!!!
    As a way to introduce our brass coins to the community, we will raffle off a free coin during the month of August. Follow link ABOVE for instructions for entering.
  • PRE-ORDER SHIPS IN SCALE TODAY!

    The beloved Ships in Scale Magazine is back and charting a new course for 2026!
    Discover new skills, new techniques, and new inspirations in every issue.

    NOTE THAT OUR FIRST ISSUE WILL BE JAN/FEB 2026

A Home Made, Byrne Inspired, Disk Sander

Joined
May 30, 2024
Messages
180
Points
143

Location
Geelong, Australia
As I am about to launch into making a scratch built 74 gun ship, I felt the need for a good quality small disk sander. On checking various vendors, and searching the topic in SOS, YouTube, and Google Images, I decided to make my own. Having recently made a drum thicknessing sander and being very impressed with the 750w AC Servo motor and controller from AliExpress, I ordered another identical motor with controller, and sat down to design my own disk sander.
I was heavily influenced by the solidity and simplicity of the Byrne sander, and spent quite a few hours with Solidworks to put my own ideas into a design. See the first photo.
Why make my own? Well cost was a major factor. Second hand Byrne sanders are available on EbayUS, at prices which seem astronomical. And many vendors have stopped shipping to Australia, presumably because of the shipping costs. But the main reason is just that I like to make tools and machines. And I can. Plus, I have heard and read criticisms that the motors on the Byrne sanders are not variable speed, not reversing, and underpowered. The 750w/1hp Chinese servo motors are variable speed, reversing, and have effortless power as I saw in my drum sander. And at $aud130 including shipping, they are very cheap.
So I made my disk sander in 4 or 5 sessions in my workshop.
The making involved accurate marking out, milling, lathe work, and modifying designs as I proceeded. I ordered some adhesive aluminium oxide 125mm diameter sandpaper disks from AliE, and waited until they arrived before finalizing the design.
The photos are the almost finished machine. If you are interested in the details of the machining look at recent posts on my blog, johnsmachines.com
I still have to make a dust extraction port and dust collection well, so there will be one more workshop session for that.
Apart from the motor, controller and sanding disks, all materials and parts came out of my workshop. Total cost was $aud200.
The table tilts to 45 degrees in 5 deg steps and also continuously. The protractor fence is a hemi circle also in 5 degree steps. The angles are accurate to within a small fraction of one degree. I can run this machine from 200 to 2000 rpm without any need for bolting or clamping the base. Above 2000rpm it does need to clamped to the bench.
I can see several further enhancements being made, including an attachment for making disks and truncated cones 5-150mm diameter. And adjustable stops for repetitive work.Screenshot 2026-01-02 200623.png
If there is interest I can draw up and post some plans.
Screenshot 2026-01-02 200623.png
IMG_6779.jpegIMG_6776.jpegIMG_6772.jpeg
 
Yes, that is the next job.
You will probably want to enclose the area under the table and have a vac hose socket in the box.
Corrugated box is strong enough.
Yes, your comment prompted me to get on with it. I decided on a 3D printed dust pan, with a hole for a vacuum outlet. 3.5 hours of printing with a QIDI filament printer. Works well.
dust pan.png

IMG_6783.jpegIMG_6784.jpeg
 
Last edited:
Lmk if you are willing to sell this in a kit form? Like customer just supply the motor/electronics, I currently have a proxxon big disc sander , but always looking fir new tools :)
Or how about doing s recreate of the famous bryne table saw ? I can not afford $2500 USD + for a used one lol
 

One more development... Now the dust box has a 3D printed lid to increase the air flow around the sanding disk. And the vacuum unit is attached. It is an inexpensive Chinese battery vacuum/blower, which works well on its lowest (and quietest) setting. Cost $aud20-30. The hose is off an old CPAP (anti snoring) unit.

IMG_6789.jpeg
 
Wouldn't it be much easier and cheaper to buy a cheap Chinese disk sander and build a wooden frame around it? I get the joy and pride of doing a replica Byrne sander but not all of us have the tools or the skills to do this type of DIY project despite being modelers ourselves.
 
Wouldn't it be much easier and cheaper to buy a cheap Chinese disk sander and build a wooden frame around it? I get the joy and pride of doing a replica Byrne sander but not all of us have the tools or the skills to do this type of DIY project despite being modelers ourselves.
Got a link.?
 
Wouldn't it be much easier and cheaper to buy a cheap Chinese disk sander and build a wooden frame around it? I get the joy and pride of doing a replica Byrne sander but not all of us have the tools or the skills to do this type of DIY project despite being modelers ourselves.
Why do you criticize someone who just happens to have the skills and tools to build such an item. I commend him for his talent and wanting a smooth running precision sander instead of a cheap Chinese piece of crap. I have both of Byrnes disc sanders and wouldn't dare to part with them.
 
Wouldn't it be much easier and cheaper to buy a cheap Chinese disk sander and build a wooden frame around it? I get the joy and pride of doing a replica Byrne sander but not all of us have the tools or the skills to do this type of DIY project despite being modelers ourselves.
Surely the main reason that we all come to this site is to learn from others, and to be inspired to improve our knowledge and skills.
Yes, I have a good collection of tools, accumulated (and many made by me) over many years. And yes, I have made some tools from wood and modified cheap machines. My first lathe was a drill held in a horizontal clamp, with a lump of wood as a tool rest.
My knowledge about tool making came not from my occupation. I was a gynaecologist. It came from trial and error, reading, having a go, and asking questions of others more expert than myself. And particularly from joining a model engineering club almost 2 decades ago.
This post was about taking the best example of a machine that I could find (the Byrnes mini disk sander), and trying to make a better one. Or at least one which would better fit my particular needs.... small size, quiet, accurate, able to be used in a room where my wife watches TV. Oh, and at an acceptable cost.
I admit that I was proud of the machine which evolved, and wanted to show it off.
And isn't that what we do on SOS with the ship models which we make?
 
Wouldn't it be much easier and cheaper to buy a cheap Chinese disk sander and build a wooden frame around it? I get the joy and pride of doing a replica Byrne sander but not all of us have the tools or the skills to do this type of DIY project despite being modelers ourselves.
its just part of the hobby mentality to make things, not buy them. i think its more fun and enhances the hobby. hobbies are time killers and the extra time it takes for r&d diy projects makes things interesting.

i see this in all my hobbies where people would rather buy instead of make things related to the hobby. then not only buy but then complain about the short comings and fall into the trap of buying the most expensive widgets... which still have short comings because its just not what they expected. so build it yourself! then you get exactly what you want plus you hone your skills as a hobbiest.

btw diy isnt always cheaper either.
 
Back
Top