A few things, they are hard to surface or thin on a lathe due to resonance or ringing or vibration.
And while Blanchard grinding is efficient and fast, it will never look stock and that is a problem when you restore a high end bike, you need the right finish.
Which I tried to set up for.. but I had to close down the shop.
But I am trying to setup a smaller place.
And still have the grinding machine, and a very Skookum rotary table that we were trying to set up a drive for... but nothing in the immediate future.
So basically picture a record player , the disc is the record, the needle is a surface grinding wheel, it needs to grind say a thou or two per cut, and feed across the disc surface.. then it will look stock.
And I had the grinder working, the grindstone did a nice job on stainless, but I was turning a rotary table by hand, and feeding out... long enough to see that it could work... but it needs a motorized drive.
I hand cranked to see if it could work and I had the right stones to prove the concept.. but the tryout gave me tendonitis.