XXGO 52 Pcs Finger Oscillating Multi Tool Sanding Pads Accessories Kits Compatible with Bosch, Chicago, Craftsman, Dremel, Fein, Harbor Freight, Makita, Milwaukee, Porter Cable, Ridgid XG3052

52 Pcs Finger Oscillating Multi Tool Sanding Pads Accessories Kits Compatible with Bosch, Chicago, Craftsman, Dremel, Fein, Harbor Freight, Makita, Milwaukee, Porter Cable, Ridgid XG3052

Features

  • Pressure Lightly & Low Speed to Multi-Tools
  • Double Face, Chrome Coating Holder and PU Material Finger Sanding Pad
  • Pack of 2 Pcs Finger Sanding Pad and 50 Pcs Finger Sandpaper
  • Not Compatible with Bosch GOP40-30, Bosch Starlock 12V / 18V, Dremel Multimax MM40 / MM45 / MM50 , Fein FMM350QSL and Black and Decker
  • Compatible with Bosch, Chicago, Craftsman, Dremel,Fein, Harbor Freight, Makita, Milwaukee, Porter Cable, Ridgid, Ryobi, Rockwell, WEN and More

Specifications

Color Silver / Black
Size 52 Pcs Finger Sanding Pads Kits

This 52-piece finger sanding accessory kit includes two double-faced, chrome-coated PU finger sanding pads and 50 finger sandpaper sheets for use with oscillating multi-tools. The pads are intended for light-pressure, low-speed sanding in tight or contoured areas and attach to compatible multi-tool sanding adapters—verify fit with your tool before use.

Model Number: XG3052

XXGO 52 Pcs Finger Oscillating Multi Tool Sanding Pads Accessories Kits Compatible with Bosch, Chicago, Craftsman, Dremel, Fein, Harbor Freight, Makita, Milwaukee, Porter Cable, Ridgid XG3052 Review

4.1 out of 5

What it is and why I reached for it

The first time I reached for the XXGO finger sanding kit was to clean up paint ridges inside the narrow recesses of a cabinet face frame—spaces too tight for a triangle pad and too awkward for hand sanding. The kit bundles two double-sided “finger” holders with 50 hook-and-loop sheets in assorted grits, all meant to ride on a standard oscillating multi-tool. It’s a simple idea: a slim, rigid, finger-shaped pad that gets into spots a conventional pad can’t.

This is not a brute-force tool. It’s meant for finesse—light pressure, low speed, careful control—where reach matters more than removal rate. Used that way, it has a clear place in a shop or on a punch list.

Setup and compatibility

Mounting is straightforward on most bolt-clamp oscillating multi-tools (the classic screw-and-clamp interface). I ran the kit on a DeWalt Atomic and a Milwaukee M12 without drama. Plan on fully removing the clamping screw to install the holder; you generally can’t just loosen it and “hook” the pad in. The holder’s profile stands slightly taller than some OEM finger pads I’ve used, which raises the working tip a bit off the tool’s nose. It didn’t affect balance much, but in very tight recesses that extra stand-off can be the difference between fitting and not.

If your tool is Starlock-only, this kit won’t fit. If your tool accepts universal (OIS-style) bolt-on accessories, you’re likely covered, but check your model. One practical note: because the holder is double-sided, it’s tempting to stick paper on both faces. I found it better to leave the back side bare until I’m ready to flip—paper on the unused side can catch and walk off when you’re working in confined cuts.

In use: control and reach

The finger shape is the point. It squeezes into inside corners, window muntin profiles, between deck balusters, and around chair spindles where even a small triangle pad crowds out. I relied on it for:

  • Cleaning glue squeeze-out in tight joints
  • Leveling small finish runs and dust nibs
  • Feathering putty patches on trim without scuffing adjacent profiles
  • Nibbing inside cabinet frames and drawer openings
  • Smoothing mill marks in shallow, narrow dados

I had the best results at the lowest oscillation speeds and with genuinely light pressure. Think “polish and finesse,” not “hog stock.” Kept flat against the surface, the paper stayed planted and cut predictably. If I lifted onto the very tip or leaned hard into edges, the sheet would start to creep or the hook-and-loop would lose traction—especially on coarse grits.

Abrasives and grit management

The 50 sheets cover a sensible spread from coarse through fine. The cut quality is adequate for detail work, and the finger geometry reaches into narrow profiles without folding or bunching. A couple of practical caveats:

  • Grit markings weren’t consistent across all sheets. Several were unmarked, and visually similar grits are tough to tell apart once you’ve been sanding. I started sorting and marking the backs with a Sharpie as soon as I opened the pack.
  • On dense hardwoods or stubborn finishes, the coarser grits dull quickly. That’s not unusual for small-format pads; you’re concentrating pressure on a tiny footprint. Expect to swap paper frequently and step through grits rather than trying to make a single sheet do too much.

I appreciated having two holders in the kit. I could keep one set up for prep (coarse/medium) and one for finishing (medium/fine), then just swap the accessory rather than peel and stick paper repeatedly.

Durability and heat management

The holder is a chrome-coated backing bonded to a PU body with hook-and-loop faces on both sides. Under the right conditions—low speed, light touch, intermittent passes—it holds up. Push it hard and heat becomes the enemy. A few minutes of aggressive, edge-loaded work can warm the pad enough that the hook field softens and loses bite, which in turn makes the abrasive slip more, which makes heat build faster. It’s a spiral you want to avoid.

Realistically, I’d call one holder good for multiple small tasks and touch-ups, and a couple of multi-hour sessions of intermittent, careful work. If you’re expecting full-tilt grinding in tight corners all day, you’ll retire the hooks sooner than you’d like. The strategy that worked for me:

  • Keep the speed at the low end of the dial.
  • Maintain broad, flat contact instead of tip-only pressure.
  • Use fresh paper rather than muscling a dull sheet.
  • Take short breaks to let the pad cool if it feels warm.

Follow those rules and you’ll get respectable life out of the holders and consistent results from the abrasives.

Where it shines

  • Detail sanding in places a triangle pad won’t fit: face frames, louver edges, inside corners, mortised profiles.
  • Controlled nibbing of finishes and fillers without over-sanding adjacent surfaces.
  • Refinishing furniture parts with narrow curves and transitions.
  • On-site punch-list cleanup: paint ridges at casing returns, caulk smears in tight reveals, light rust or corrosion in confined metal brackets.

It’s at its best as a problem-solver—small, targeted jobs where reach and control save you from awkward hand sanding or risky chisel work.

What it won’t do

  • Heavy stock removal or leveling large surfaces. Use a detail sander or a standard multi-tool triangle pad for that.
  • Long, continuous grinding in hardwoods, epoxies, or thick finishes. The heat build-up will shorten pad life and compromise the hook-and-loop.
  • Starlock-only platforms. If your tool doesn’t accept bolt-on accessories, this kit won’t be an option.

Tips for best results

  • Run slow and light. Let the abrasive do the work.
  • Keep the pad flat. Avoid leveraging on the tip or edges.
  • Stage your grits. Don’t skip too far, and change paper as soon as it slows.
  • Leave the “back” face empty until you need it. Flip when you want a fresh surface, not before.
  • Pre-sort and mark grits. A quick color dot or Sharpie note saves time and guesswork.
  • Expect to use more sheets than you would on a larger pad. The small footprint concentrates wear.

Value and alternatives

Finger pads from the big-name brands can be pricey, and many kits only include a handful of sheets. The XXGO kit gives you two double-sided holders and a large pack of paper for a fraction of what an OEM setup typically costs. That value proposition is compelling if you’re a DIYer, a remodeler knocking out occasional detail sanding, or a furniture hobbyist who wants the capability without investing in brand-specific accessories.

If you need pro-grade durability for daily use in hardwoods or paint removal, look at platform-specific finger pads from your tool’s manufacturer or industrial suppliers; they’ll often have tougher hook fields and longer-wearing abrasives, albeit at a premium. And if you’re on a Starlock-only multi-tool, you’ll need a Starlock-compatible finger pad—this kit won’t fit.

The bottom line

The XXGO finger sanding kit does exactly what I hoped: it gets a multi-tool into places a standard pad can’t reach and gives me controlled, low-impact sanding for fussy details. The trade-offs are clear. You have to respect its limits—low speed, light touch, and patience—or you’ll heat-soak the holder and fight slipping paper. The abrasives are serviceable, not spectacular, and inconsistent grit markings mean a little prep helps.

Used thoughtfully, though, it’s an affordable, handy problem-solver that has earned a spot in my multi-tool case. I reach for it whenever I’m staring at a narrow recess that shouldn’t be chiseled and can’t be hand-sanded without contortions.

Recommendation: I recommend the XXGO finger sanding kit for anyone with a bolt-on oscillating multi-tool who needs occasional, precise sanding in tight spaces. It’s cost-effective, reaches where other pads can’t, and performs reliably if you keep speed down and pressure light. I would not recommend it for Starlock-only users or for heavy, continuous removal work—choose a platform-specific or pro-grade pad for that. For detail work and touch-ups, this kit makes a lot of sense.



Project Ideas

Business

Mobile Furniture Touch-Up Service

Offer on-site minor repairs and refinishing for clients: chair arm smoothing, scratch blending, and veneer edge repair using the finger sanding pads. Low setup cost and fast turnaround make this attractive to Airbnb hosts, staging companies and busy homeowners.


Finish-Ready Custom Wood Parts for Makers

Produce and sell small, pre-sanded components (knife handles, clock faces, cabinet trim) to Etsy or local maker markets. Market the advantage of tightly contoured, finish-ready parts that save hobbyists hours of prep work—include care instructions and recommended topcoats.


Workshops & Micro-Classes

Run short, hands-on classes teaching contour-sanding techniques (furniture detail, instrument touch-up, model finishing). Use the kit in demonstrations and sell extra sandpaper packs as class add-ons. Workshops can be held at maker spaces, hardware stores, or pop-up events.


Content & Niche How-To Channel

Create short video content (TikTok/Reels/YouTube Shorts) showing clever uses of the finger pads: inside-corner magic, veneer repair, or before/after reveals. Monetize via affiliate links to the sanding kit, sponsored tool videos, and digital downloadable guides.


B2B Finishing Subcontracting

Offer specialized finishing sub-contract services to cabinetmakers, custom furniture shops, or prop houses that need tight-area sanding (inside joints, routed profiles). Position your service as a cost-effective add-on to reduce shop bottlenecks; bill hourly or per-piece.

Creative

Curved Chair Arm Restoration

Use the finger sanding pads to access tight curves and undersides of vintage chair arms and spindles. Sand out old varnish and smooth carved edges before refinishing. The small pads let you keep profile lines crisp without removing detail—follow with progressive grits from the 50-piece set for a hand-rubbed finish.


Detailed Musical Instrument Touch-up

Perfect for luthier-style work: smooth inside cutaways, fretboard edges, headstock curves and small dings on acoustic guitars or ukuleles. Low pressure and low speed avoid burnishing veneers, and double-faced pads reduce tearout on delicate woods and finishes.


Scale Model & Miniatures Finishing

Use the finger pads to sand tiny contours on architectural models, RC bodies, dollhouse furniture and resin-cast miniatures. The small contact area and variety of grits let you remove mold lines and smooth complex shapes without damaging fine detail.


Custom Knife & Tool Handle Shaping

Shape and smooth wooden or composite handles for knives, chisels and hand tools. The pads let you follow compound curves and inside recesses (finger grooves, tang slots) for an ergonomic finish, then switch grits to a satin-ready surface.


Upcycled Home Decor with Contours

Give new life to sculpted frames, carved moldings, and decorative corbels. Sand recessed ornamentation and inner corners that a belt sander can't reach, allowing refinishing, distressing, or bright staining for rustic or modern decor pieces.