The front of a diamond tool shows the working face.
That is useful.
It does not confirm fitment.
A tool can look correct from the front and still fail on the machine because the back side, plate connection, adapter fit, or mounting system is wrong.
For machine-based tooling pages, start with Shop by Machine.
The front photo shows the job type
The front side helps identify the tool stage.
PCD tools suggest coating removal.
Metal bond segments suggest grinding and scratch control.
Hybrid pads suggest transition.
Resin pads suggest polishing.
But the front side does not prove the tool will install on the grinder.
The back side shows the connection
The back side tells a different story.
It shows how the tool attaches to the plate.
It may show a slide-on shape, bolt holes, a quick-change pattern, a hook and loop backing, a threaded connection, or an adapter requirement.
This is why a back-side photo can prevent a wrong order faster than a long product description.
Plate type changes the order
The grinder model matters, but the plate matters too.
A machine may use a standard plate, replacement plate, adapter plate, or modified setup.
If the plate changed after purchase, the original machine model may not tell the full fitment story.
A buyer who only sends the machine brand may still order the wrong tool.
Adapter plates can solve one problem and create another
Adapter plates help contractors run one tooling style on another machine system.
They are useful when the machine and tool do not match directly.
But adapter fit still has to be checked.
Height, contact, bolt position, plate condition, and tool clearance can affect how the setup works on the floor.
For adapter options, review Adapters and Plates.
A wrong fit is not a small problem
A tool that does not fit wastes time before the job starts.
A tool that almost fits can be worse.
It may sit unevenly, contact the floor badly, create vibration, or leave an uneven scratch pattern.
Concrete grinding is already hard enough. The tool should not fight the plate.
The job step still matters
Fitment comes first.
Then the job step decides the tool type.
If the floor has epoxy, glue, mastic, or coating, start with PCD and Coating Removal.
If the floor is ready for grinding, leveling, or scratch control, review Metal Bond Grinding Tools.
If metal scratches need refinement before resin polishing, review Hybrid Pads.
Why machine brand alone is not enough
A message like “I need tools for Husqvarna” gives only the starting point.
The real question is which Husqvarna model, which plate, which tool connection, and which job step.
The same logic applies to Lavina, HTC, Scanmaskin, EDCO, Terrco, Diamatic, Blastrac, and other grinder systems.
Brand helps. Fitment details decide.
What photos to send
Send the front of the current tool.
Send the back of the current tool.
Send the grinder plate.
Send the machine nameplate if available.
Send one photo of how the tool sits on the plate.
These photos are not for decoration. They show whether the connection makes sense.
What details to include
Send the grinder brand and model.
Send the tooling system or plate type if known.
Send the current job stage.
Send the floor condition.
Send the target result.
Send the quantity and destination country.
This matches the information needed to recommend the right tooling step before ordering.
Do not confirm fitment from one image
One image can hide the most important detail.
The product face may look right.
The segment shape may look right.
The grit may look right.
The mounting system may still be wrong.
If the back side or plate connection is unclear, confirm it before ordering.
Related Tools and Next Step
For machine-based product browsing, start with Shop by Machine.
For adapter and compatibility options, review Adapters and Plates.
For coating removal, review PCD and Coating Removal.
For concrete grinding and scratch control, review Metal Bond Grinding Tools.
If you need help checking fitment, send your grinder model, plate photo, front and back tool photos, current job step, floor condition, and target result through Contact.

