I hadn't said before, but my hot glue chuck is a 4" faceplate, cast iron, that screws onto the drive of my CL1 and I have screwed a piece of 1 1/2" thick pine onto it. Turned it down to the size of the face plate, trued it up and scored several rings to help aligne small pieces. Sometimes when I knock work off of it a small bit of the face comes off too so I just reface it, rescore the liles and off we go again. A 1 1/2" thick bit lasts for ages and costs nowt..
I didn't know it was called a sticky chuck :mrgreen: :mrgreen:
Edit : - I have just read the instructions for Peter Childs sticky chuck. Warm it up, apply the hot melt glue and wait for it to cool? Sound quite a palava. With my wood faced version I switch the glue gun on as soon as I know I am going to need it. Prepare the blank by which time the gun is ready. Put a ring of hot glue onto the chuck and press the wood blank onto it. By the time I have walked across the workshop and mounted it on the lathe it's ready to turn. No need to wait for anything.