Orraloon
Established Member
I have seen a few home made hot dog handle arrangements but thats the most professional looking one yet.
Regards
John
Regards
John
Thanks JohnI have seen a few home made hot dog handle arrangements but thats the most professional looking one yet.
Regards
John
Perhaps you didn't read the OP's message:Beautiful, but spoiled by the knobs.
Most impressive. Some time ago I made several slide whistles and had real difficulty boring the holes straight what is your technique and how is the mandrel used?A new, slightly fatter, mandrel, for turning the tubes for some whistles - along with freshly turned tubes in Padauk, Pear and African blackwood.
I read it perfectly well, thanks, it's still spoiled in my opinion. An opinion to which I am perfectly entitled.Perhaps you didn't read the OP's message:
"The handles are made using a red stabilised maple burr, but I didn’t use enough dye in the cactus juice so the blanks ended up rather pink, but perfect here as it’s my niece’s favourite colour."
So, how is "perfect" for the intended recipient "spoiled"?
Hi there, Cooper,Most impressive. Some time ago I made several slide whistles and had real difficulty boring the holes straight what is your technique and how is the mandrel used?
Thank you most helpful. I'll look up the Record long hole borer. I bought a set of 30cm wood drill bits off Amazon and they were hopeless. In the end I drilled from both ends and then tried to get them to align with the long bits.Hi there, Cooper,
I use a Record long hole borer, on my lathe, to give me the initial hole of 8mm. I widen this with a 12mm long hole borer that a friend gave me , ( I've not seen these for sale, but they obviously exist because I have one )
. The bored out tubes are then slipped onto the mandrel, which in turn is fitted between an ER32 collet chuck at the headstock and a live centre at the tailstock of the lathe The outer diameter of the tubes is then turned, which corrects any misalignment of the hole and gives a fairly consistent wall thickness.
The new mandrel shown in my last post is 1/2 inch. This involves widening the 12mm hole with a home-made reamer. For this I used a straight 1/2 inch , double bearing router cutter. As in attached photos. The bottom 1/2 inch bearing has been changed for a 12mm steel bushing, and the shaft has been heat-shrink fitted into a long steel tube. This is used upright in a vice as per photos and gives pretty good results
Niall
Do you have a 12mm hollow centre in your tail stock or do you have one that fits in the saddle?I widen this with a 12mm long hole borer that a friend gave me
Attached, are a couple of photos of a post for fitting into my lathe's saddle. My lathe is a Union Jubilee, so the 1 inch post will be similar to yours. - Bye the way, you will have to ream out the hole in the post with a Morse taper, but you can do this on your wood lathe, by hand. With the lathe turned off and the reamer in a Jacobs chuck in the tail stock; the drilled-out post can be held transversely in a chuck in the headstockDo you have a 12mm hollow centre in your tail stock or do you have one that fits in the saddle?
Years ago when young I was a wood work teacher I had long augers in my workshop and a hollow centre that fitted in the saddle. Though they weren't 12mm or 1/2" as we only used them for table lamps and precision wasn't particularly important.
I have a very old graduate lathe that I was allowed to take from a later department, which otherwise would have gone for scrap. None of the kit came with it.
Thank you most helpful.Attached, are a couple of photos of a post for fitting into my lathe's saddle. My lathe is a Union Jubilee, so the 1 inch post will be similar to yours. - Bye the way, you will have to ream out the hole in the post with a Morse taper, but you can do this on your wood lathe, by hand. With the lathe turned off and the reamer in a Jacobs chuck in the tail stock; the drilled-out post can be held transversely in a chuck in the headstock
I am at present using a metal working lathe, for which I made a a more versatile fitting.
A tenon on the work piece fits into a pillow-block bearing. Behind this are fitted. interchangeable bushings. to suit the hole being drilled. You should be able to cobble together something similar for your wood lathe
Niall
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