When you say 4" grinder I am going with a "hand-held" "angle grinder" rather than a bench mounted or pedestal off hand grinder as the latter are normally 6" or above. Such devices normally use reinforced abrasive disks.
Either way, to remove the guard you would be modifying the safety features of the machine, and unless this is an approved method detailed in the operating manual for the equipment would negate the CE marking, thus putting you in breach of PUWER Reg 10. (I am presuming that you are in the UK, as I can only respond from a UK standpoint.)
You will almost certainly find that sanders designed to use flexible coated abrasive disks have a different design to that of an angle grinder, even if it is only the mounting pad for the disk itself.
If the machine OEM offers a mounting disk for coated abrasives then this this could be an approved use.
If you are looking at an offhand bench or pedestal mounted grinder that normaly uses bonded abrasives such as archetypal rigid aluminium oxide or silicon carbide grinding wheels.
These are often available with a grinding wheel at one end of the spindle and a sanding disc at the other, however, such machines are designed in this manner.
To modify one, again unless sanctioned by the OEM would negate the CE marking and put you in brach of PUWER reg. 10.
To do either is possible, but you would need to design and CE mark suitable guarding as required to be fitted to the converted equipment.
Such guarding falls under Annexe V of the Machinery Directive and the Supply of Machinery (Safety) Regulations, and therefore must be CE marked independently unless provided as a spare part by the OEM.
To do such things safely and correctly, probably negates the cost of procuring the correct equipment for the task.
Though if one does buy equipment, please ensure it is correctly CE marked and most importantly, safe!
The fist security image ended in CE how apt!
Edited by user 06 October 2021 10:09:55(UTC)
| Reason: Comment