What You're Actually Getting

So, 750 watts. That's not going to scare a professional sparky, but for home use? Honestly, it's plenty. I had a mate who bought a full 1400W grinder for cutting some old railing in his garden, used it twice, and it's been sat in a cupboard ever since. The UniversalGrind 750-115 is the sensible answer to that situation. Lighter, easier to handle, and you're not lugging half a kilo of extra motor around when all you need is to trim a bolt or clean up a weld.

The 115mm disc size is worth noting. You're not cutting thick stock with this. But for slicing through tile, trimming metal bar, or knocking rust off old garden furniture, it does the job without drama. The three included cutting discs are a nice touch as well, means you're actually up and running the same afternoon you buy it.

Who This Is Actually For

If you're tiling a bathroom, doing a bit of metalwork in the shed, or just need something reliable for occasional jobs around the house, this is spot on. The compact size makes it less intimidating if you're not used to angle grinders, which matters more than people admit.

Who should skip it? Anyone doing sustained heavy cutting or serious grinding on thick steel. The 750W will get warm on long runs, and the 115mm disc limits your depth. For that kind of work, you want something beefier.

Not half bad at all for a home toolkit staple. Just know what you're buying it for.