Hi Bill, never seen a tapered pen mandrel, although a lot of the better/larger pen kits are turned between centres, rather than using a mandrel. Most people use a standard straight mandrel, and buy the extra sized bushings when needed. Axminster Tools do a reasonable set, and I believe they sell the additional bushings as well. Axminster pen mandrel
Perhaps you mean a mandrel with a straight or tapered connection to the lathe? I use a mandrel with a Morse 2 taper to fit my headstock. See here for more detail.
Hi
Thanks for the replies,. When I said tapered or straight mandrel I did mean the fitting to the lathe.
Can anyone suggest the best place to get the pen kits.
hi bill
only turned about a dozen or so pens myself at the moment, but if you visit ebay at type in pen kits, you can get the slim lines for about £1 a set delivered while you learn, moving onto others who sell bigger and better kits, you can also get the bushings on there too.
great fun, enjoy the forum too..
Welcome to the forum Bill, I use a mandrel with a straight shank that fits in my 4 jaw chuck, this avoids having to remove the chuck each time to use the morse taper.
In fact I find that I rarely use the headstock morse taper as drive centres etc. designed to be gripped in the chuck are accurate enough for wood work.
Bill - i think the straight one is specifically for the axminster pen lathe (from memory of a review it had straight not morse taper fitting) or holding in a headstock drillchuck. I can't find the lathe on a search of their webpage so maybe discontinued.
you need to get a mandrel that matches the morse taper of your lathe.
I use this type from stilesandbates as the length can be adjusted (useful if you need to return one half of a pen back to the lathe. It also comes with 'universal' bushes that are tapered to fit into the larger diameter tubes (but i prefer to get the dedicated bushes for these):
http://www.stilesandbates.co.uk/
EDITED URL as it was too long so messed up the view of all posts. From the home page search on mandrel