I tend to get some spare tubes for the kits too for a few reasons:
1. if you ruin one, you can have a spare blank glued up and ready to continue.
2. tubes are cheap and kits at £7 each get expensive to have on your shelf.
3. if you are in a hurry, you can turn the pen whilst you wait for the kit to arrive in the post.
4. it is also easier to glue up in batches of a few, again you may not want £70 of kits sat there, but £10 of tubes is not so bad. Same goes for painting tubes, so you can have some ready, otherwise you wait for paint to dry, then for glue to dry and 3 days after starting you can put it on the lathe!
5. When doing a few pens, I find it annoying to have to go through every bag taking out the tubes. having the spare set, you just leave them in there until you are assembling the pens and replenish your stash.
6. You do damage the odd one now and again.
1. if you ruin one, you can have a spare blank glued up and ready to continue.
2. tubes are cheap and kits at £7 each get expensive to have on your shelf.
3. if you are in a hurry, you can turn the pen whilst you wait for the kit to arrive in the post.
4. it is also easier to glue up in batches of a few, again you may not want £70 of kits sat there, but £10 of tubes is not so bad. Same goes for painting tubes, so you can have some ready, otherwise you wait for paint to dry, then for glue to dry and 3 days after starting you can put it on the lathe!
5. When doing a few pens, I find it annoying to have to go through every bag taking out the tubes. having the spare set, you just leave them in there until you are assembling the pens and replenish your stash.
6. You do damage the odd one now and again.