Edenta Green Flame Polisher 24 mm – Coarse Grit (0674HP-6)
Référence: H14377

Green Flame Polisher — Edenta
The Edenta green flame polisher is your go-to tool for controlled rough finishing of acrylic resin in the dental lab.
It removes bur marks quickly, levels concave areas, and creates a uniform surface before moving to medium/fine grit and final polishing.
- Flame shape, 24 mm: access embrasures and tight areas without rounding edges
- Coarse grit: fast stock removal and rapid scratch leveling in the first pass
- 15,000–20,000 rpm: stable dry finishing with light pressure and short passes
Why choose the Edenta green flame polisher
In the dental lab, the most time-consuming step is often cleaning up the surface after carbide burs: visible grooves, uneven texture, and heat build-up that can smear the resin.
- The green (coarse grit) stage is designed to bring the surface back “under control” fast, while preserving anatomy and edges.
- Thanks to the flame geometry, you can work precisely in concavities, embrasures, and transition areas without over-rounding.
- Used dry at a controlled speed with light pressure, it reduces the time spent on medium/fine steps and helps standardize results across technicians.
The outcome is a more uniform surface, a shorter polishing sequence, and a more repeatable finish quality on acrylic resin appliances.
Applications & how to use (lab workflow)
- Rough finishing of acrylic resin dentures after trimming or adjustments.
- Fast scratch removal and leveling before medium and fine grit steps.
- Accurate work in concave zones and embrasures thanks to the flame shape.
- Mount on a Ø 2.35 mm shank (micromotor).
- Set to 15,000–20,000 rpm and work dry.
- Use light pressure with continuous motion and short passes.
- Alternate areas, allow to cool, then move to medium and fine grit.
Related products
Technical specifications
| Shape / grit | Flame / Green (coarse grit, 1st step) |
| Length | 24 mm |
| Shank | Ø 2.35 mm — micromotor |
| Recommended speed | 15,000 to 20,000 rpm |
| Use | Dry rough finishing, fast bur-scratch removal |
| Pack | Pack of 6 pieces |
| Reference / SKU | 0674HP-6 — Edenta |
Delivery
Contents: 1 pack of 6 pieces — Edenta green flame polisher.
Lab tip: keep a dedicated set for coarse finishing to maintain consistent cutting efficiency and avoid cross-contamination from other materials.
FAQ — frequently asked questions
Where does the Green Edenta polisher fit in a professional lab polishing sequence?
The Green (coarse grit) step is used immediately after burs, when you need to remove grooves and tool marks quickly and restore a uniform surface.
It is designed for leveling and smoothing while keeping control of anatomy, edges, and transitions—especially in embrasures and concave areas.
Next, switch to the Grey (medium grit) to refine the surface texture, then the Yellow (fine grit) to prepare the resin for pumice or high-gloss polishing, depending on your protocol.
Following this sequence helps reduce rework, standardize results across technicians, and deliver a more predictable finish on acrylic resin appliances.
What settings and technique prevent heat build-up, whitening, or resin smearing?
Work within 15,000–20,000 rpm and keep light pressure: cutting efficiency comes from speed and movement, not force.
Use short passes with continuous motion and avoid staying in one spot, which is the main cause of localized overheating.
Alternate areas to let the resin cool naturally; if the surface starts to smear or turn white, pause briefly and resume with reduced pressure.
Clean the polisher regularly (dry brushing) to prevent clogging—an overloaded abrasive runs hotter and loses cutting performance quickly.
How do you maintain the green flame polisher to extend its service life in the lab?
Avoid heavy pressure that can deform the flame profile and wear the abrasive prematurely, reducing precision in concave zones.
After use, remove debris with a dry brush and store the polishers clean and dry; aggressive solvents are not recommended for routine maintenance.
Keep this polisher dedicated to coarse resin finishing and replace it once cutting slows down—this is when technicians typically lose time and generate more heat on the resin.
A clean, dedicated coarse set helps maintain consistent performance and repeatable finishing quality on removable dentures and acrylic appliances.