The Importance of the Backing Plate Washer
Anyone who owns a DA buffer has seen the little washer that slips over the threaded stud on the backing plate, but you may not think it's all that important. Well, it's actually critical to the operation of the tool, and here's a perfect example why. But first, just to clarify the part in question, here are a couple of pictures:
The black washer on this W67DA backing plate is the part we're focusing on here.

This is a W68DA backing plate (ships with the G110v2) and it also should have the same washer in place.

Same W68DA plate but with the washer pulled up a bit just to get a closer look at. Seems like a pretty innocent little part, doesn't it?

Well, a customer contacted our Customer Care Center saying that he couldn't remove his backing plate from his G110v2 and thought something in the tool might have broken. The pad would also stop rotating with even light pressure, no matter the tool speed. The tool arrived with backing plate attached (not one of our backing plates, as it turns out, but it still illustrates the problem) and, sure enough, we couldn't get it to come off either. With the wrench holding the spindle nut in place the plate would just turn. It also had a pretty big wobble showing when turning it; so much so that you could just wiggle the thing around as if it were a plate sitting on a ball. Close inspection showed that the spindle was definitely not moving when held by the wrench, so we wondered if maybe the threads inside it were stripped. But wouldn't that mean we could basically just pull the backing plate off?
And then it hit - the threaded stud on the backing plate is basically one end of a rivet, or it's welded in, depending on the construction of the plate. Like we said, this isn't one of our backing plates so we didn't know exactly how it was manufactured. We then thought maybe the stud was broken inside the backing plate. So out comes the Swiss Army Knife and we started cutting through the face of the backing plate. And that's when it got interesting!
With the center of the backing plate cut out we could see the head of the stud was broken away from the inner metal disc of the backing plate, and the plate would just spin around it. A pair of vice grips gave us a hold on the head of the stud and, with the wrench on the spindle nut, we could unthread it from the tool.

This is the side of the plate you're all familiar with, showing how it broke. With the soft foam body and hook material on the face of the plate holding it all together, everything was just loose inside the plate and therefore it couldn't be removed from the tool. And since it was loose inside the backing plate, pressure placed down on the pad would cause the pad to stop spinning while the broken stud would spin inside the backing plate.

And that wobble we mentioned a bit earlier? Look what it caused to the tool itself! As that wobble got worse it caused those three small rivets you see in the shot above to contact the tool, gouging it quite noticeably. This constant impacting of plate to tool is what most likely caused the ultimate failure of the threaded stud. We found that we could still thread a new backing plate into the spindle nut and everything ran fine (with the washer installed of course!) and we could then remove the backing plate just as you always do. No stripped threads here. The tool itself, other than some cosmetic damage you can see below, is perfectly fine.

So, don't omit the washer when mounting ANY backing plate to your DA. There are enough similarities between all the various popular DA buffers on the market that we'll go so far as to say regardless of the plate or the tool, don't skip the washer!!!
Moral of the story: Little things mean a lot.
Anyone who owns a DA buffer has seen the little washer that slips over the threaded stud on the backing plate, but you may not think it's all that important. Well, it's actually critical to the operation of the tool, and here's a perfect example why. But first, just to clarify the part in question, here are a couple of pictures:
The black washer on this W67DA backing plate is the part we're focusing on here.
This is a W68DA backing plate (ships with the G110v2) and it also should have the same washer in place.
Same W68DA plate but with the washer pulled up a bit just to get a closer look at. Seems like a pretty innocent little part, doesn't it?
Well, a customer contacted our Customer Care Center saying that he couldn't remove his backing plate from his G110v2 and thought something in the tool might have broken. The pad would also stop rotating with even light pressure, no matter the tool speed. The tool arrived with backing plate attached (not one of our backing plates, as it turns out, but it still illustrates the problem) and, sure enough, we couldn't get it to come off either. With the wrench holding the spindle nut in place the plate would just turn. It also had a pretty big wobble showing when turning it; so much so that you could just wiggle the thing around as if it were a plate sitting on a ball. Close inspection showed that the spindle was definitely not moving when held by the wrench, so we wondered if maybe the threads inside it were stripped. But wouldn't that mean we could basically just pull the backing plate off?
And then it hit - the threaded stud on the backing plate is basically one end of a rivet, or it's welded in, depending on the construction of the plate. Like we said, this isn't one of our backing plates so we didn't know exactly how it was manufactured. We then thought maybe the stud was broken inside the backing plate. So out comes the Swiss Army Knife and we started cutting through the face of the backing plate. And that's when it got interesting!
With the center of the backing plate cut out we could see the head of the stud was broken away from the inner metal disc of the backing plate, and the plate would just spin around it. A pair of vice grips gave us a hold on the head of the stud and, with the wrench on the spindle nut, we could unthread it from the tool.
This is the side of the plate you're all familiar with, showing how it broke. With the soft foam body and hook material on the face of the plate holding it all together, everything was just loose inside the plate and therefore it couldn't be removed from the tool. And since it was loose inside the backing plate, pressure placed down on the pad would cause the pad to stop spinning while the broken stud would spin inside the backing plate.
And that wobble we mentioned a bit earlier? Look what it caused to the tool itself! As that wobble got worse it caused those three small rivets you see in the shot above to contact the tool, gouging it quite noticeably. This constant impacting of plate to tool is what most likely caused the ultimate failure of the threaded stud. We found that we could still thread a new backing plate into the spindle nut and everything ran fine (with the washer installed of course!) and we could then remove the backing plate just as you always do. No stripped threads here. The tool itself, other than some cosmetic damage you can see below, is perfectly fine.
So, don't omit the washer when mounting ANY backing plate to your DA. There are enough similarities between all the various popular DA buffers on the market that we'll go so far as to say regardless of the plate or the tool, don't skip the washer!!!
Moral of the story: Little things mean a lot.
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