Blade-balance oddity

bullet bob

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I bought a used Toro 21" self-propelled for my daughter. Among other things, I pulled the blade, sharpened it but when I went to balance it using my https://www.sharpeningsupplies.com/...8vIgSSCKYG-FFbB7tjnKVGrVH0G7DFqxoC47kQAvD_BwE
When the blade was completely horizontal, it showed a perfect balance. But when I moved the blade to almost vertical, it immediately went back to horizontal. Does this make any sense?
 

StarTech

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Besides one side of each end is heavier the other side on the same end. A good balancer can easily see the difference. The balancer I use is very sensitive to this mismatch weight. I am even finding new blades out of balance.
 
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bullet bob

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I thought if something was balanced east to west, it would also be balanced north to south.
 

StarTech

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Well it seems it would but the laws of gravity works differently. It would someone that studies this to explain why but I think it something to do how things attract and repel other each other.
 

Jimmy the Lock

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So how do you guys bring a blade in to balance if it's out of balance?

Do you take a grinder and remove material off of the blade on the heavy side and keep testing until it's balanced?

I know ya'll can't be adding weight as you'd have to get a welder for that
 

MParr

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A 16d nail in a stud or tree works well.
 
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