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Technical Guide · Floor Grinding
Professional educationHow to choose the right grinding segment for your concrete floor
Two factors determine your result. Get them wrong and you’ll burn through segments — or stall on the floor entirely.
Whether you’re removing coatings, leveling a slab, or preparing a surface for polishing — the grinding segment you choose defines everything: how fast you work, how long your tooling lasts, and the quality of the end result.
There are exactly two selection factors that matter. Most contractors focus on the first. The professionals who optimize both are the ones who never waste a segment.
Controls how aggressive the grinding action is. Low grit cuts hard and fast. High grit refines the surface.
Controls how the segment behaves on the floor. Determined by concrete strength — often overlooked, always important.
Factor 1
Grit size: how aggressive is the cut?
Grit refers to the size of the diamond particles embedded in the segment. The lower the grit number, the larger and more aggressive the diamonds — and the more material removed per pass. Higher grit means finer, more controlled contact with the surface.
| Grit | Category | Typical application |
|---|---|---|
| #16 / #20 / #25 / #30 | Coarse | Coating removal, bitumen stripping, aggressive stock removal |
| #60 / #80 / #100 | Medium | Surface leveling, scratch removal, general preparation |
| #120 / #150 | Fine | Final surface preparation before polishing |
| #150+ | Polishing | Resin polishing pads recommended — metal shoes less effective at this range |
For grinding above #150 grit, switch to resin polishing pads. Metal grinding shoes are optimized for the coarse-to-medium range — beyond that, resin delivers better results and longer tool life.
Factor 2
Bond hardness: matching the tool to the floor
The bond is the metal matrix that holds the diamond particles in place. As the segment grinds, the bond wears away — exposing fresh diamonds. The rate at which this happens must match the hardness of the floor you’re working on.
This is the counterintuitive rule that trips up many contractors:
Use a soft bond — the hard floor won’t naturally wear the segment, so a softer bond self-opens to expose fresh diamonds
Use a medium bond — balanced wear rate for standard industrial concrete
Use a hard bond — soft concrete wears segments quickly, so a harder bond extends tool life
Hard concrete → Soft bond. Soft concrete → Hard bond. Mismatching bond to floor is the single most common cause of premature segment wear and poor grinding performance.
Concrete classification
Reading the floor: C-class and bond selection
Concrete strength is expressed in C-classes (compressive strength). In practice, most contractors gauge floor hardness from experience, grinding behavior, and segment wear — rather than laboratory tests. The table below maps floor type to the correct bond.
| Floor type | Code | Concrete class | Mohs | Recommended bond |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Very soft floor | VSF | C25 or less | — | Hard bond |
| Soft floor | SF | C25 | 2–4 | Hard bond |
| Medium floor | MF | C25–C30 | 3–4 | Medium bond |
| Hard floor | HF | C30–C35 | 4–6 | Soft bond |
| Very hard floor | VHF | C35–C40 | 5–6 | Soft bond |
Mohs hardness (a 1–10 mineral scale) gives an additional reference point. Concrete typically falls between Mohs 3–6. While useful context, it is rarely measured on-site — experienced contractors read the floor by how it responds to the machine.
Practical examples
What does this look like in the field?
Summary
Putting it together
For most everyday jobs, grit size is the primary decision — it determines the application. Bond hardness is the optimization layer: it separates good results from great results, and prevents costly segment wear on demanding projects.
Price lists and product catalogues typically highlight grit and application type. But behind every professional recommendation is a bond selection matched to the floor — and that’s where the real performance difference lies.
BYCON Europe · Technical Advice
Not sure which segment fits your floor?
Tell us about your application and we’ll recommend the right grit and bond — free of charge.
