pidgeonpost
Established Member
Last year I bought a s/hand lathe with a view to doing some small scale turning. This was partly with the intention of using up accumulated oddments of timber left over from larger projects, and partly for the fun of it.
I'd done a small amount of turning 10+ years ago, mostly knobs or handles for other items, but also legs for a few stools. I didn't do enough to become slick at it but I'm having problems getting back into it now.
I have a couple of cubic metres of kiln dried ash firewood, all 10" - 12" long so I thought that would be worth a try. Better than buying blanks and turning them into firewood, I thought. It's not going well.
The tools are hand-sharpened and seem pretty sharp even if the bevel angles aren't spot on and some a bit multifaceted. I'd prefer to improve my hand sharpening rather than buy a jig which I guess will still need tweaking to suit the tool type.
I'm particularly interested in turning the smaller items - along the lines of what Richard Raffan turns out with great ease on YouTube. I guess it's a case of keeping on keeping on. Any thoughts?
I'd done a small amount of turning 10+ years ago, mostly knobs or handles for other items, but also legs for a few stools. I didn't do enough to become slick at it but I'm having problems getting back into it now.
I have a couple of cubic metres of kiln dried ash firewood, all 10" - 12" long so I thought that would be worth a try. Better than buying blanks and turning them into firewood, I thought. It's not going well.
The tools are hand-sharpened and seem pretty sharp even if the bevel angles aren't spot on and some a bit multifaceted. I'd prefer to improve my hand sharpening rather than buy a jig which I guess will still need tweaking to suit the tool type.
I'm particularly interested in turning the smaller items - along the lines of what Richard Raffan turns out with great ease on YouTube. I guess it's a case of keeping on keeping on. Any thoughts?