nev
Established Member
at a tangent from drillbits post.... a bowl gouge is next on the shopping (birthday pressie) list, and of course there are a 1001 to choose from :?
so I am looking for my first bowl gouge, any suggestions as to which way to lean? it will be for er...bowls, boxes and anything else i can use it for, mostly between 2 and 8 inch dia.
i do like the sound of a Ray Key modified gouge (i know it is a spindle gouge) but according to the sales bumph sounds like it is just what i want, being useful for hollowing and shaping the outside. anyone have any experience of such a thing?
from http://www.henrytaylortools.co.uk/hss1.html
Used mainly for making boxes, from hard dense end grain material. Internal hollowing from the centre is made easy with short stubby 60/65° angle, this allows for a strong vibration free pivot cutting action, as the bevel can be rubbed for much of the time. For outside shaping the long side grind is used with the bevel rubbing , the tool is pulled along the material. Quality of surface obtained is the equivelent of a skew chisel, but is much better than a skew on duifficult woods. ""
This tool is also used for refined shaping of the outside of small bowls. Used correctly the bevel rubs with a slicing cut action and leaves a very clean tool finish, no scraping is required. end grain hollowing on softer woods and larger work is best done with the 1/2" gouge. The end / side cutting scraper is made from a 3/4" square end scraper. This is used to true up gouge ripples in the base of flat bottomed boxes and to true up the side walls. The 1/2" skew is one that has a much longer angle than normal, it is used more like a sheer scraper is used for the truing up of gouge ripples in the base of soft curved boxes, goblets, egg cups etc. The modified straight across the grind make it much easier to remove the nipple or pimple often foound in such items when the rounded end ones are used.
if the concensus is no to one of these, what to look for instead?
so I am looking for my first bowl gouge, any suggestions as to which way to lean? it will be for er...bowls, boxes and anything else i can use it for, mostly between 2 and 8 inch dia.
i do like the sound of a Ray Key modified gouge (i know it is a spindle gouge) but according to the sales bumph sounds like it is just what i want, being useful for hollowing and shaping the outside. anyone have any experience of such a thing?
from http://www.henrytaylortools.co.uk/hss1.html
Used mainly for making boxes, from hard dense end grain material. Internal hollowing from the centre is made easy with short stubby 60/65° angle, this allows for a strong vibration free pivot cutting action, as the bevel can be rubbed for much of the time. For outside shaping the long side grind is used with the bevel rubbing , the tool is pulled along the material. Quality of surface obtained is the equivelent of a skew chisel, but is much better than a skew on duifficult woods. ""
This tool is also used for refined shaping of the outside of small bowls. Used correctly the bevel rubs with a slicing cut action and leaves a very clean tool finish, no scraping is required. end grain hollowing on softer woods and larger work is best done with the 1/2" gouge. The end / side cutting scraper is made from a 3/4" square end scraper. This is used to true up gouge ripples in the base of flat bottomed boxes and to true up the side walls. The 1/2" skew is one that has a much longer angle than normal, it is used more like a sheer scraper is used for the truing up of gouge ripples in the base of soft curved boxes, goblets, egg cups etc. The modified straight across the grind make it much easier to remove the nipple or pimple often foound in such items when the rounded end ones are used.
if the concensus is no to one of these, what to look for instead?