Abrasive Types, Applications & Selection

A Guide to Abrasive Types, Applications & Selection-1

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2026-06-27 / Written by Vicky

If you work in metal fabrication, construction, automotive repair, or manufacturing, abrasives are part of your daily life. But with hundreds of products on the market — grinding wheels, cutting discs, flap discs, sanding belts, diamond tools — it’s easy to feel overwhelmed.

What’s the difference between bonded and coated abrasives? When should you use a flap disc instead of a grinding wheel? And how do you choose the right grit for your job?

This guide answers all of that, step by step. Whether you’re a procurement manager sourcing from China or a workshop owner looking to improve your grinding results, you’ll walk away with a clear understanding of abrasives — and how to pick the right one every time.


1. What Are Abrasives?

At the simplest level, an abrasive is a material — usually a hard mineral — used to wear away, smooth, polish, or cut a softer material through friction.

Think of sandpaper rubbing against wood. The tiny sharp particles (abrasive grains) scratch the surface, removing a thin layer with every pass. Now scale that up to industrial grinding — the principle is the same, but the forces, temperatures, and precision requirements are far greater.

Abrasives are everywhere:

  • Shaping a metal weld seam smooth
  • Cutting through a steel pipe
  • Polishing a stone countertop to a mirror finish
  • Removing rust from a car body before painting

2. The Four Major Types of Industrial Abrasives

Industrial abrasives fall into four main categories. Understanding these will instantly narrow your choices by 80%.

2.1 Bonded Abrasives

Bonded abrasives are abrasive grains held together by a bonding agent — typically resin, vitrified (ceramic), or rubber — and pressed into a rigid solid shape.

Common products:

  • Cutting discs (cut-off wheels)
  • Grinding wheels
  • Mounted points and grinding heads

Best for: Precision cutting, heavy stock removal, sharpening, and dimensional grinding on metals, stone, and concrete.

Key advantage: Rigid structure allows high-speed operation and precise material removal.

🔗 Explore our Bonded Abrasives range →

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