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Need Simple Water Feed Setup for Grinder

Posted: Tue Sep 30, 2003 6:39 am
by candala
Can anyone suggest a VERY simple set up for setting up a bottle of water to intermittently drip on my glass while grinding. No matter what I do, I find that I need more and more water when I grind. I thought of purchasing a splash guard from Delphi glass and hooking up a water bottle to drip. Any other suggestions or proven methods? Thanks.

Posted: Tue Sep 30, 2003 11:08 am
by Carol
IV drip system can be adjusted to give you the speed of water delivery you need.

Posted: Tue Sep 30, 2003 11:13 am
by Tony Serviente
First thought is why do you need more and more water? Are you doing some kind of unusual grinding? I have a half dozen grinders in my studio and the usual sponge delivery suffices 99% of the time.
If you want to rig up something fast and cheap, I'd get the kind of hummingbird feeder that uses a tube to dispense the water, and add an extension hose, available at your local hardware store. Use a plastic soda bottle for the water, but first drill a small ( 1/16") hole in the bottom.Fill it with water, invert it, and put the hose by the head of the grinder. You'll have to improvise some kind of stand to hold it up. If the drip is too slow, make the air hole larger. If the flow is too fast, use a small c clamp on the hose and you'll be able to crudely regulate the flow that way. A more elegant solution would be to get a small water pump for water delivery, but that is more expensive and complicated. Good luck!

Posted: Tue Sep 30, 2003 11:55 am
by Dick Ditore
I bought a small fountain pump, put it in a tupperware container below the grinder, and plastic tubing to drip on the sponge. another tube goes into the drain at the bottom of the grinder. Then I just change the water often. I added a little valve to control how much water flows.



Dick

Posted: Tue Sep 30, 2003 12:52 pm
by charlie
to prevent splashing, put the grinder in a 10 gallon fish tank tipped on it's side. you can get one for under $10 usually, the top surface allows you to look down on the glass without getting splashed, and the rest of the tank will hold and contain any splashing.

Posted: Tue Sep 30, 2003 8:34 pm
by Barbara Cashman
Carol wrote:IV drip system can be adjusted to give you the speed of water delivery you need.
Dang...been using one of those things on the cat for 2 weeks. Cat didn't make it, so I threw the IV unit away. Could have been a very expensive investment that went into the garbage. Anyway, I found the turn-type nozzle on a box-wine bag does fine too. After Marmalade passed, we went through a couple of them. - Barbara

Posted: Tue Sep 30, 2003 8:58 pm
by Dani
We'll have to trade cat IV stories some time.... but let's drown the tears with those big jugs of wine. I want to slump a few into bread trays for homemade farmhouse loaves. :wink: I'm really sorry about Marmalade... if you were closer, I'd let you adopt Julius, the latest orange kitten.... pretrained to the glass studio.

Posted: Tue Sep 30, 2003 9:32 pm
by Chip
I use the copper set up that should be used with an icemaker from a fridge. Taps into the plumbing, has a loooong small copper tube you can run anywhere, and you can easily put a small valve on the end to control the flow, or just use the valve on the part that attaches to the plumbing.

Posted: Wed Oct 01, 2003 7:45 pm
by Greg Rawls
I use a 10 gallon plastic trash can. I put a small brass connection in the bottom and connected it with tygon tubing to the grinder. Put the trash can up high so that it gravity feeds. All brass fittings can be bought at Lowes in the plumbing dept. Works great!

Posted: Thu Oct 02, 2003 12:57 am
by Carol
Barbara Cashman wrote:
Carol wrote:IV drip system can be adjusted to give you the speed of water delivery you need.
Dang...been using one of those things on the cat for 2 weeks. Cat didn't make it, so I threw the IV unit away. Could have been a very expensive investment that went into the garbage. Anyway, I found the turn-type nozzle on a box-wine bag does fine too. After Marmalade passed, we went through a couple of them. - Barbara
Another good use for those old IV bags...they make tough "booties" for dogs with injured paws that need to keep their stitches dry. Sorry to hear about your kitty loss.