I received a Hamlet Big Brother hollowing tool for Christmas, well it turned out to be the little brother but I can live with that.
This uses a ring or cup cutter with a bevel cum shroud that sits above the cutter.
I had read some were that ring cutters should be sharpened from the inside edge so I used a Diamond hone to get a working edge. Some time latter I found that it is recommended to sharpen the cutter from the outside edge?
First attempt with the brother was disappointing but looked more promising when I got the cutter block and shroud the right way round! I tried a few test cuts on some dry close grained wood and whilst it was apparent that the tool required a different technique than my trusty bowl gouge I had a few good cuts and turned a small goblet from dry Hawthorn 3" high 1/16th wall as a test piece. Ended up getting the outside in order with a bowl gouge as the Brother had left some tool marks but it was a move in the right direction.
Now I thought to turn a proper piece and got the wet Laburnum out of its poly bag and onto a screw chuck and use the new tool in earnest. This is were the disappointment set in again, I was getting some cuts but the cutter completely clogged after just a few inches of cut. I gave up in the end and returned to the trusted bowl gouge.
Any advice on use of this tool or urls would be great.
Tony
This uses a ring or cup cutter with a bevel cum shroud that sits above the cutter.
I had read some were that ring cutters should be sharpened from the inside edge so I used a Diamond hone to get a working edge. Some time latter I found that it is recommended to sharpen the cutter from the outside edge?
First attempt with the brother was disappointing but looked more promising when I got the cutter block and shroud the right way round! I tried a few test cuts on some dry close grained wood and whilst it was apparent that the tool required a different technique than my trusty bowl gouge I had a few good cuts and turned a small goblet from dry Hawthorn 3" high 1/16th wall as a test piece. Ended up getting the outside in order with a bowl gouge as the Brother had left some tool marks but it was a move in the right direction.
Now I thought to turn a proper piece and got the wet Laburnum out of its poly bag and onto a screw chuck and use the new tool in earnest. This is were the disappointment set in again, I was getting some cuts but the cutter completely clogged after just a few inches of cut. I gave up in the end and returned to the trusted bowl gouge.
Any advice on use of this tool or urls would be great.
Tony