The expected life for a CBN wheel is about 5 years of production work. Stuart Batty made that comment once, and I do agree with that. They will not last forever if you are a production turner. They can be cleaned up some, which is necessary if you turn a lot of sloppy wet wood. Dave Schweitzer said he would soak his in Simple Green cleaning solution for a while, then hit with a wire brush. I do apply a drop or two of the Trend Lapping fluid to the bevel of my scrapers mostly, and then sharpen. If I apply to the wheel, I get a racing stripe down my front.... There are hard aluminum oxide sticks that some sell for 'cleaning' your wheels. Mostly they make a lot of dust. If your wheels have loaded up with softer metals, you can remove that by sharpening your scrapers. Again, the lapping fluid helps. I did intentionally load up a very old set of wheels with aluminum, copper, brass, and soft steel just to see what would happen. Took a month to get all of the softer metals off, but it did come off, and that was just with sharpening the scrapers. The gouges didn't seem to work as well for removing the build up. The wheels cut very fast for 6 or so months, again, depending on how often you turn and sharpen. They settle in for a couple of years, and then, eventually they will need to be replaced. They do wear out. Diamond is forever, at least pretty much so, but you need slow speed wheels like the Tradesman grinder from Canada or a Tormek and clones. The coarsest wheel they make for the Tormek is 360 grit.
robo hippy