As I found out in my other thread, I made a mistake using a wire wheel on aluminum, and now I've got to clean up the pitting from that, as well as the awfully rough casting between the ribs.
Thing is, those tiny inner compound curves are a huge pain to remove any significant amount of material from by manually sanding, even with 100 grit. Some corners are even downright impossible, as the sandpaper just won't bend enough to get in there, and screwdrivers tend to rip it!
I have the same issue in some very small areas on the crankcase, near where the sprocket comes out. Naturally I'm turning to dremel and die grinder, but what bits let you do fine sanding? Everything is like 40-80 grit.
So what have people used to sand in tiny areas? The perfect tool would be like, a rounded soft sponge with various grits glued on, ideally available in diameters from 1/4" to 1". Know of anything?
I mean, I can't imagine this guy is sanding and polishing crappy casting marks by hand:
https://carpyscaferacers.com/shop/brake-system-parts/drilled-and-polished-rear-brake-assembly/ On closer inspection of those pictures, I guess carpys didn't get it sanded perfectly smooth either, I see some minor blemishes. That makes me feel better, but I still have to start on 1200+ grit tomorrow, and I'm not looking forward to it. I can't believe there aren't tools for this yet...