Dave Siddle
Member
Hi, I.m new to both woodturning and this forum, so please be patient with me...
I've recently got into bowl turning and have been working with a beautiful piece of spalted beech I bought on a certain auction site. After turning the outside, i noticed one or two cracks had formed over the few days that had passed since I last looked at it. I was hoping to Dremel the crack out a little to allow me to fill them with some kind of resin, which I wanted to perhaps colour and maybe add some sparkle. I've had a Google around, but this has just made me more confused. Would I be better with Epoxy, to help bond the wood together, or something else? Ideally I'd like to be able to polish it up to a high shine.
I'm also getting into pen making, and aim to experiment with kitless pens and making my own blanks and perhaps even stabilising wood to produce hybrid blanks. I do have some background in engineering and work as an Arborist, so have a steady supply of wood, but this is all new to me, but has grabbed my interest ever since a customer gave me her husbands old Record lathe!
Many thanks for any help and advice.
I've recently got into bowl turning and have been working with a beautiful piece of spalted beech I bought on a certain auction site. After turning the outside, i noticed one or two cracks had formed over the few days that had passed since I last looked at it. I was hoping to Dremel the crack out a little to allow me to fill them with some kind of resin, which I wanted to perhaps colour and maybe add some sparkle. I've had a Google around, but this has just made me more confused. Would I be better with Epoxy, to help bond the wood together, or something else? Ideally I'd like to be able to polish it up to a high shine.
I'm also getting into pen making, and aim to experiment with kitless pens and making my own blanks and perhaps even stabilising wood to produce hybrid blanks. I do have some background in engineering and work as an Arborist, so have a steady supply of wood, but this is all new to me, but has grabbed my interest ever since a customer gave me her husbands old Record lathe!
Many thanks for any help and advice.