One or two times probably not but more than that likely will. Especially if there were major dents you grinded away. You can buy a cheap plastic tool to check the balance and then just grind away from the non blade side to balance it out.
It really depends on your definition of balanced and how bad someone is at sharpening.
The blades are torqued down on there, if it’s a combustion engine mower, nothing’s you do to this blade sans taking an inch off is going to make much more vibration than the motor will itself.
The biggest worry is that you put enough vibration into it too cause it to loosen the blade.
If you’re even half reasonable sharpening you’re just taking off a fraction of a gram.
Uh does sharpening really do enough to unbalance it?
It can, yes. Remember these are rather heavy blades spinning really fast, so it doesn’t take much.
One or two times probably not but more than that likely will. Especially if there were major dents you grinded away. You can buy a cheap plastic tool to check the balance and then just grind away from the non blade side to balance it out.
If you grind the same on each side without trying to get rid of any dents, it would still add up?
It really depends on your definition of balanced and how bad someone is at sharpening.
The blades are torqued down on there, if it’s a combustion engine mower, nothing’s you do to this blade sans taking an inch off is going to make much more vibration than the motor will itself.
The biggest worry is that you put enough vibration into it too cause it to loosen the blade.
If you’re even half reasonable sharpening you’re just taking off a fraction of a gram.