Hi there
After reading some of your sticky guides on safety and being new to turning, I was quite amazed to see the amount of toxins in wood, I was aware of Yew and Laburnum, I gathered that any dust from any wood can be toxic to some degree or at least an irritant to the skin, I am used to fumes/dust from my work in the metalwork industry so I am aware of the dangers etc
Question is my set up is very basic, small lathe 20 inch bed, in the shed at the bottom of the garden with my grinders and drill presses etc I currently use a Henry for sucking the dust from grinders/sanders and wear a dust mask as i make a few items out of Balsa wood, but now with the lathe in place and having bought a few pen blanks from Ebay in various woods including Yew, Iroko, Laburnum which I have having a problem working out which is which to be honest as they are in mixed packs with other woods Oak, Elm etc.
What I would like advice on is that my daughter wants to learn turning and with some small blanks I thought that would be an ideal way to learn. Now after the typical internet googling and reading info on wood and toxins etc all of a sudden it does not seem like a good idea.
So question is, is there a safe wood to work with ? ( I understand all wood dust or dust in general is bad for you without proper protection ) Is there a wood that would poses little danger to ones health, is it just the dust you need to be careful of, or the chips/shavings that come from the tools when you are turning the pieces or is it really just the sawdust when you are sanding the piece on the lathe, and applying the waxes,oils etc .
I have seriously being bitten by the bug and I think this compliments my metalworking, I have little knowledge of wood and since posting here the other day I have had some very useful PM's from people, so i thought what the hell put the cards on the table and say I am a newbie and need help...
I do understand that people have worked with wood for centuries in one form or another and common sense must prevail, hence if you work in a room full of dust of any kind it is going to affect you in someway. I would also like your advice on a dust/facemask I have seen several on machine mart, ebay etc and would like something a little more protective if need for myself and my daughter. I bought some 3m 8835 FFP3 masks but have seen some others but of course but am not sure, as the one I wore at work was a full organic respirator with serious filters strapped on both sides. I feel that would be overkill for what will amount to turning small items in a shed, but I could be wrong.
So for those that scanned to the bottom without reading it all, my questions are
Is there a safe wood to use when teaching a young person to turn?
What sort of protection would you recommend?
Is it safe to turn the laburnum,yew and Iroko and any other toxic wood, if so what protection should one take?
Regards
Simon
After reading some of your sticky guides on safety and being new to turning, I was quite amazed to see the amount of toxins in wood, I was aware of Yew and Laburnum, I gathered that any dust from any wood can be toxic to some degree or at least an irritant to the skin, I am used to fumes/dust from my work in the metalwork industry so I am aware of the dangers etc
Question is my set up is very basic, small lathe 20 inch bed, in the shed at the bottom of the garden with my grinders and drill presses etc I currently use a Henry for sucking the dust from grinders/sanders and wear a dust mask as i make a few items out of Balsa wood, but now with the lathe in place and having bought a few pen blanks from Ebay in various woods including Yew, Iroko, Laburnum which I have having a problem working out which is which to be honest as they are in mixed packs with other woods Oak, Elm etc.
What I would like advice on is that my daughter wants to learn turning and with some small blanks I thought that would be an ideal way to learn. Now after the typical internet googling and reading info on wood and toxins etc all of a sudden it does not seem like a good idea.
So question is, is there a safe wood to work with ? ( I understand all wood dust or dust in general is bad for you without proper protection ) Is there a wood that would poses little danger to ones health, is it just the dust you need to be careful of, or the chips/shavings that come from the tools when you are turning the pieces or is it really just the sawdust when you are sanding the piece on the lathe, and applying the waxes,oils etc .
I have seriously being bitten by the bug and I think this compliments my metalworking, I have little knowledge of wood and since posting here the other day I have had some very useful PM's from people, so i thought what the hell put the cards on the table and say I am a newbie and need help...
I do understand that people have worked with wood for centuries in one form or another and common sense must prevail, hence if you work in a room full of dust of any kind it is going to affect you in someway. I would also like your advice on a dust/facemask I have seen several on machine mart, ebay etc and would like something a little more protective if need for myself and my daughter. I bought some 3m 8835 FFP3 masks but have seen some others but of course but am not sure, as the one I wore at work was a full organic respirator with serious filters strapped on both sides. I feel that would be overkill for what will amount to turning small items in a shed, but I could be wrong.
So for those that scanned to the bottom without reading it all, my questions are
Is there a safe wood to use when teaching a young person to turn?
What sort of protection would you recommend?
Is it safe to turn the laburnum,yew and Iroko and any other toxic wood, if so what protection should one take?
Regards
Simon