Bonds can be of various types depending on the type of material to be used for manufacture such as silicate, rubber, bakelite, and so forth. Depending on the type of bonding material, there is a unique process for each of these types of wheel manufacture. All these processes have their own set of advantages and drawbacks and hence the best possible method should be used for specific applications.
For example in case of the silicate bond process, sodium silicate is mixed with the abrasive material grains and the moulded material is dried and baked for several hours and the temperature of this baking operation is nearly in the range of 270 degrees Celsius. The main advantage of this type of manufacturing is the fast process which is completed within a matter of days (yes, you read it right, it is fast) and bigger sized wheels can be made with ease. The flip side is that such wheels wear out very quickly since the bond is not as strong as other bonds such as, say, a vitrified bond. Similarly all processes have their own unique characteristics.
A wheel is classified either having an open structure or a dense structure, wherein the former refers to finer grain arrangement and vice versa.