TobyB
Established Member
I wanted some 70 cms lengths of dowel, 10-15 mm diameter, made of the same wood as the rest of the piece. Tried making this (pushing it, as I have a sort-bed lathe!) and the whip was way beyond my skills to control. I don't have a centre-steady ... but even if I had I think I'd have struggled ... might have managed with 2-3!
Veritas dowel cutter ... great tool ... with a little bit of practice ... great results ... whip doesn't matter much when sanding it smooth. And MUCH cheaper than buying (and perhaps even making) a centre-steady.
Instructions suggest using a socket to drive the wood using an electric drill. Tried this ... rapidly and repeatedly the initially v.tight grip on the wood (walnut and ash) just stripped and spun. Gripped the wood in pin-jaws on my lathe and held the cutter in my right hand (VERY cautiously at first, no idea of the torque) ... slow speed ... easily cut pieces of dowel, and controlled the lathe and whip with my left hand ... felt very safe and controlled ...
Good tool ... but might have been disappointed if I didn't have a lathe with a suitable chuck and jaws.
Anyone else used these to good/bad/indifferent effect?
Veritas dowel cutter ... great tool ... with a little bit of practice ... great results ... whip doesn't matter much when sanding it smooth. And MUCH cheaper than buying (and perhaps even making) a centre-steady.
Instructions suggest using a socket to drive the wood using an electric drill. Tried this ... rapidly and repeatedly the initially v.tight grip on the wood (walnut and ash) just stripped and spun. Gripped the wood in pin-jaws on my lathe and held the cutter in my right hand (VERY cautiously at first, no idea of the torque) ... slow speed ... easily cut pieces of dowel, and controlled the lathe and whip with my left hand ... felt very safe and controlled ...
Good tool ... but might have been disappointed if I didn't have a lathe with a suitable chuck and jaws.
Anyone else used these to good/bad/indifferent effect?