<len...@yahoo.com> wrote in message
news:37i7i5hqhdjulli01...@4ax.com...
My tool of choice for pens and other small work is a small (1/4 or 3/8") oval
skew, preferably one that is short enough to use comfortably with one hand..
Nothing rolls like an oval skew, and you can get a nice shearing angle with it..
The Eliminator with carbide cutter....One expensive tool that you probably
aren't ready for but that I wish I'd bought years ago... AWESOME tool for boxes,
vases, etc..
mac
Please remove splinters before emailing
I really like the termite tool...and no, plugging up with shavings is
not a problem.
LB
?
I really like this in 1/2 or 5/8 for boxes, bowls, and vases.
robo hippy
> http://www.packardwoodworks.com/Merchant2/merchant.mvc?Screen=CTGY&St...
"robo hippy" <reed...@comcast.net> wrote in message
news:f32f9f41-7ed0-41bb...@s21g2000prm.googlegroups.com...
snip
. I have the Soren Berger tool, and even
> after seeing him a couple of times demonstrate the tool, can't seem to
> get it to work.
>
> robo hippy
The soren berger tool works well used as follows
1. you must be making a square sided box - it doesn't do curves, and you
must be cutting end grain.
2. drill a hole to desired depth large enough for the tool to fit in
3. insert tool so the cutter part is mostly inside the hole
4. rotate so blade starts to cut and pull HARD against the wood coming down
on the blade
If you do this right, it peels a layer of shavings that look like they came
from a pencil sharpener - it is very fast.
5. repeat four moving down one "blade length" at a time until you get to the
bottom. The design of the tool will allow you to cut a smooth bottom in one
pass, then pull the tool up the side of the box to smooth it out.
6. you are done.
what you may be having trouble with is either getting it to cut (just rotate
it while pulling hard away from the center), or you are trying to do
something other than what it does.
When you get the hang of it, you will agree, for what it does, it is
amazing.
>On Dec 12, 11:53�am, len...@yahoo.com wrote:
>> Trying to decide what if anything I'd like to add to my collection of
>> turning tools. I have an older Rockwell/Delta reeves drive lathe and a
>> Jet mini that will be my Winter lathe set up in the basement. From the
>> good advice I got here at the time I added a Talon chuck and some
>> decent Harbor freight turning tools. I've made a Oland tool (Thanks
>> Arch) and have recently added a bowl gouge, a flat and round nose
>> scraper. I mostly turn pens (gouge to round and Skew to finish) but am
>> starting to do a few lidded boxes as well. What is your opinions on
>> your favorite tools?
>
>I really like this in 1/2 or 5/8 for boxes, bowls, and vases.
I have a supercut and thought it was pretty good until I tried the mega
Eliminator.. It's what I was hoping for when I got the supercut, just doesn't
have the swivel head (which never stays in on position for me)
http://tinyurl.com/ye482ba
I've never had a problem with the swivel head moving. I do some deep
undercut rims so the swivel head really comes in handy.
> Trying to decide what if anything I'd like to add to my collection of
> turning tools.
What is your opinions on
> your favorite tools?
I use a bowl gouge somewhat like an Ellsworth grind. I have also recently
made a hook tool for hollowing out some bucket-type vessels - learning that
the angle of grind on the hook is key to what I can do inside the vessel,
regarding the shape of the interior - will do more experimenting with this,
as it is fairly easy for me to make these hooks. I also like a couple of
home-made scraping type chisels, one for smoothing out curved interior
surfaces, and the other for cleaning up straight-sided and square-cornered
interior surfaces (like a cylindrical box and its lid). Thanks to tips here,
I can also call a fistful of shavings a tool, for final smoothing of a sanded
surface. Thanks, folks, very pleasing.
For other Shopsmith owners who are not too happy with their tool rest
clamping setup - the jamming action against the elevation screw starts to
damage the thread, especially when you are trying to make it stay put against
the force of a bowl gouge - I made a nice bar clamp which clamps around this
screw and wedges against the carriage to keep the tool rest from moving into
the work. I love it. I know the SS is not the best tool for turning, but it
is what works in my shop, so I am learning how to wring it out, and make it
deliver for me.
tom koehler
--
I will find a way or make one.
>>
>> I have a supercut and thought it was pretty good until I tried the mega
>> Eliminator.. �It's what I was hoping for when I got the supercut, just doesn't
>> have the swivel head (which never stays in on position for me)http://tinyurl.com/ye482ba
>> >http://www.packardwoodworks.com/Merchant2/merchant.mvc?Screen=CTGY&St...
>>
>> mac
>>
>I've never had a problem with the swivel head moving. I do some deep
>undercut rims so the swivel head really comes in handy.
Yeah, exactly why I'm lusting after Hunters carbide tipped gooseneck tools...
There goes another few hundred bucks..
What it comes down to is everyone has there own style and methods, A tool
that works well for one doesn't work for another. Unfortunately, it often
costs a fair amount of money finding what tools are good for your style. I
have traded many tools with a friend of mine down the road. We also loan
each other tools to try out.
"CW" <cmagers@earthlink...net> wrote in message
news:oK-dnZEyPtt02rHW...@earthlink.com...
Tools hell. I wish I had more skill.
Ed
well, shoot... me too and likely all others here. No matter what the skill
level, there's always something wrong. I try to make a thing, and do my best.
When I decide to stop working on it and maybe sand it and even put on some
kind of finish, my dear wife will go into raptures over it, and friends and
associates will make all kind of approving noises - yet all I see are my
mistakes and where I could have or should have done something different. Now,
if I go and make another thing, and then actually DO something different like
I think I should have... well, that could be progress. And if I go a little
ways outside my comfort zone and produce something I am not repelled by...
well that could be progress. Maybe seeking progress is a little bit like
stretching, and the stretching is a little uncomfortable. If it was
comfortable, it wouldn't be stretching, it would just be yawning.
>
> well, shoot... me too and likely all others here. No matter what the skill
> level, there's always something wrong. I try to make a thing, and do my best.
> When I decide to stop working on it and maybe sand it and even put on some
> kind of finish, my dear wife will go into raptures over it, and friends and
> associates will make all kind of approving noises - yet all I see are my
> mistakes and where I could have or should have done something different. Now,
> if I go and make another thing, and then actually DO something different like
> I think I should have... well, that could be progress. And if I go a little
> ways outside my comfort zone and produce something I am not repelled by...
> well that could be progress. Maybe seeking progress is a little bit like
> stretching, and the stretching is a little uncomfortable. If it was
> comfortable, it wouldn't be stretching, it would just be yawning.
> tom koehler
>
>
Thanks!
<len...@yahoo.com> wrote in message
news:37i7i5hqhdjulli01...@4ax.com...