I am trying to hollow out some musical instrument bodies. The work is either cherry, douglas fir sometimes sycamore or maple.
The sides are between 12 and 15mm wide and I have been removing the bulk with forstner bits. I've been using 3/4" firmer chisel to remove the waste between 1 & 2" forstner bit waste holes but only by pushing (also used 1 +1/2 bevel edge too). I'm a bit worried the sides might not take the force of striking with a mallet, but pushing the chisel taking thin slices each time is quite hard work.
I am wondering what the best type of chisel would be to use. I know I could use a router but am not a fan of them for various reasons. Would a mortise chisel be any good? I mostly chisel with the edge of the chisel parallel to the grain, moving straight down, so exactly not how a mortise chisel would work.
Thanks
The sides are between 12 and 15mm wide and I have been removing the bulk with forstner bits. I've been using 3/4" firmer chisel to remove the waste between 1 & 2" forstner bit waste holes but only by pushing (also used 1 +1/2 bevel edge too). I'm a bit worried the sides might not take the force of striking with a mallet, but pushing the chisel taking thin slices each time is quite hard work.
I am wondering what the best type of chisel would be to use. I know I could use a router but am not a fan of them for various reasons. Would a mortise chisel be any good? I mostly chisel with the edge of the chisel parallel to the grain, moving straight down, so exactly not how a mortise chisel would work.
Thanks