woodfarmer
Established Member
I have at last made myself a grinding station. I wanted to just sharpen the new tools I had with the lathe and preserve the original grind from the manufacture to reduce metal removal. first the 1/2 bowl gauge. I had problems using this on a bit of hard old oak beam, mostly with tearing. Looking carefully at the original grind this was flat cut from teh face of a grinding wheel and not concave from the outer periphery. Actually ALL of the original grinds were done the same way. Flat not hollow ground. This makes a lot of sense to me as I am used to metal turning tools and giving vertical support to the cutting edge is a big thing. about three light wipes rolling it on the platform gave me a shiny surface which when tested both on the oak and a bit of pine cut beautifully. So I also "touched" my 3/8" bowl gauge as well as they both had the same original angle as did my large roughing gauge (45 degrees) none of this is what most books recommend . The 1/2" bowl gauge did not have a even round original grind but as I was able to get an edge in all the important parts I left the original side alone. eventually after a few sharpenings I will get down to that bit. Apart from needing to make jigs for other angles the basic grind station will do all of the tools I have except my skew chisel.. This came as a surprise because the parting tool is tapered from the middle to each edge and I was wondering how to construct something that would hold it square. Then I realised the the original grind was not square, It had been held down on one face and ground, then rolled over and held down on the same side and ground again. so the tip is slightly skewed. I have used it and it works fine out of the box. If you look closely you can see the tip is not dead central with the centre of the tool. Assuming that is that I can post a picture.
the spindle gauge I haven't sharpened yet as it requires another angle to be set in the
grinding station. the thing to note here is that it is lop sided as one side is ground back more than the other. Is this intentional or a manufacturing mistake? I dont want to make it even if it is meant to be lop sided.
EDIT the picture came out in the wrong order. the first is the offset spindle gauge.
the second is the 1/2" bowl gauge and the last is the parting tool as it came from the manufacturer.
the spindle gauge I haven't sharpened yet as it requires another angle to be set in the
EDIT the picture came out in the wrong order. the first is the offset spindle gauge.
the second is the 1/2" bowl gauge and the last is the parting tool as it came from the manufacturer.