I have been given some largish pieces of elm (still wet) and am not sure how I am going to hold these after the initial roughing out.
Usually, when I get some wet wood, I rough turn the bowl, leave it in shavings for several months and then put it back on the lathe, finish the inside and then remount it between a wooden friction chuck and the headstock in order to finish the outside and remove most of the tennon that I originally used to hold the piece when wet.
The problem is that the pieces of elm will not clear the lathe bed and I will have to turn them off the end of the main bed using a tool rest mounted on an extension lower bed (please see photo below). No problem so far but, after the initial turning and after allowing the wood to dry for a few months, how do I remount the bowl to finish the turning when I can't use the headstock (as it only fits on the main lathe bed - not the lower bed).
I hope that this makes sense and that someone with far more experience than I have can point me in the right direction.
Usually, when I get some wet wood, I rough turn the bowl, leave it in shavings for several months and then put it back on the lathe, finish the inside and then remount it between a wooden friction chuck and the headstock in order to finish the outside and remove most of the tennon that I originally used to hold the piece when wet.
The problem is that the pieces of elm will not clear the lathe bed and I will have to turn them off the end of the main bed using a tool rest mounted on an extension lower bed (please see photo below). No problem so far but, after the initial turning and after allowing the wood to dry for a few months, how do I remount the bowl to finish the turning when I can't use the headstock (as it only fits on the main lathe bed - not the lower bed).
I hope that this makes sense and that someone with far more experience than I have can point me in the right direction.