🛠️ Sand Your Way to Perfection!
This 48-piece sandpaper kit features a comprehensive assortment of 16 grits ranging from 120 to 5000, designed for both wet and dry applications. Made from durable silicon carbide, these sheets are perfect for woodworking, automotive polishing, and more. Each sheet measures 9 x 3.6 inches and can be easily cut to size, ensuring you have the right tool for any job. With a commitment to customer satisfaction, this kit is your go-to solution for all sanding needs.
J**Y
Good product
Had the chance to use a # of different grits on a project this past week and they all worked well!
R**Z
Usefulness
The sandpaper is very good
M**R
Good sandpaper
Use it for sanding plastics. Pretty good, just not good for wet sanding. Falls apart in your hands.
D**M
Average quality
This is relatively low-priced sandpaper, so the quality goes along with that. It does the job well.
W**E
It's sand paper. It sands well
It's sand paper, did what i needed it to do.
P**W
Didn't need this job but big selection
All the grades you need for wet sanding
J**J
I Do Like Sand
I used these to restore the headlights on my cars. They work just fine. I really love the variety that this pack comes with. The ones on the shelves at local shops usually require you to buy multiple packs to go from really low to really high grit. They don't last terribly long, but these have gotten me out of a pinch here and there. I've done about 6 total headlights with one set. So if you have a lot of time and not a lot of money, this is the way. Highly recommend to any at home DIY-er.
P**7
Know your Grit!!!
I nearly destroyed an epoxy table top that I had been working on for about a week. I had bought these because of the range of grit. But the grit labeled IS NOT what the grit is! P2000, P1500, P1200, & P1000 seem to be ok. BUT P800 is more like P400, P600 is closer to P300, and the same with P400 (closer to P200). P320 might be P250. P220 is P100. P240, I don't know what it's closer to, it's rougher than P220 and P180. The P180 is P150. P150= P80. P120=P60. And that is for MOST of the sheets. They very for each grit. Some of the P150 seem like P60s. So if you are not VERY familiar with the grit variants, you can very easily use the wrong one and destroy a project.I grabbed the p120 and had I not known what it is supposed to be, I would of done a "light sand" with a P60.Other than that, it's durable paper. They hold up well (so far anyways). It's just the labeling that needs a serious adjustment. Hopefully the pix are clear enough to show what I'm saying.
TrustPilot
3天前
1 周前