Thanks, guys.
I am a comparatively inexperienced woodturner, and I have recently wanted to decorate my creations in various ways. I have used wire burning on the exterior of bowls, but have wondered about doing the same on the rims or interior of bowls. My fellow turners on this site have advised using an off cut of Formica, or bits of certain hard woods.
i recently saw a YouTube video in which a woodturner recommended making a tool out of ‘tempered’ wire for burning circles on the faces and interiors of turned bowls. I had previously made a similar tool using a short loop of galvanised wire ( the same wire that I used successfully to burn exterior grooves) bedded in a short wooden handle. This tool did not work, no matter how long I held the loop to the wood. All that happened was that the loop distorted. On the face of it, and if it works, the the tempered wire version of the tool seems to be a good, and permanent, alternative to trying to get hold of bits of Formica, but I wonder about its basis, I.e does tempered wire mean it can withstand higher temperature than standard wire? If I understand AES’s reply correctly it seems that heating tempered wire only serves to soften it. This would make the burning tool as useless as my own version. It may be, however, that the temperature needed to soften the wire is much greater than that generated by the friction needed to burn wood, in which case the tool would work
What do you think?
D
@Democritus: Blimey mate, I ain't 'arf glad that Jelly has already answered because I know NOTHING whatever about wood turning - I didn't even know that you blokes used bits of wire to burn grooves into the outside of bowls.
But approaching your question based purely on guesswork, I'm pleased to see that Jelly has already hit the point that first occurred to me - i.e. the galvanised wire you've been using up to know will be much too soft to achieve the results you want if trying to burn grooves onto the INSIDE of a bowl.
Just as Jelly says, the basic steel you're using will be a "very mild" steel (i.e. almost no carbon). Or it may even be soft iron wire. But in both cases it will be much too soft in its original state to hold the circular shape you need - remembering that unlike burning grooves onto the OUTSIDE of the bowl (when you need a force to PULL the wire against the rotating bowl), now, for an INSIDE groove, you need a PUSHING force to get the wire into hard contact INSIDE the rotating bowl.
Jelly's proposal for preparing such galvanised wire is very interesting (thanks for that Jelly, bookmarked for my own info) but if you don't want to go to those lengths, I'd suggest a POSSIBLE alternative (BUT based purely on my guesswork though):
1. As per my last post, first find a model shop that sells piano wire. (You'll no doubt need Google or Yellow Pages these days).
2. Select the hardest/stiffest piano wire you can find, and choose a piece as thick as you possibly can (obviously, as per the width of the groove you want to burn into the bowl, but basically, the thicker the better). As examples, my little black book tells me that 10 SWG is diameter 0.128 inches, and that 20 SWG is 0.040 inches diameter (sorry for the inches, my book is like me - old)!
3. Now take the longest length of whatever wire you choose as you can find and "cold form" it (i.e. bend it cold, NO heat, just bend gradually by hand) around a wooden former (or two) to gradually get towards the actual diameter that you want, making sure to leave 2 straight "tails" in the wire (i.e. your now circular shape is roughly in the middle of the original straight length of wire). Also make sure that the finished circle is LARGER than the inside diameter of the bowl to be burnt.
4. Bend over to 90 degrees then cut off the 2 tails (abrasive cut off disc) so that the whole lot, tails and all, will only just fit inside the bowl.
5. Now get something like a small wooden file handle (with metal ferrule) and drill though the complete length of the handle with drill diameter that will JUST allow both wire tails to pass though the hole.
6. Having "pushed and shoved" to get the whole assembly into the bowl, now use pliers or something to PUSH the 2 wire tails outwards while holding the file handle so that the wire circle is forced firmly OUTWARDS against the inside of the bowl.
This MAY work, BUT please note:
A) it's all only my "theoretical guesswork";
B) having even a part of your hand INSIDE the bowl while it's rotating (I assume at quite high rpm?) sounds pretty darn dangerous to me;
C) obviously, depending on the size of your hand and the size of the pliers and file handle, this will only work on a bowl of a pretty big diameter!!
As said, this idea sounds potentially pretty dangerous to me, so best of luck mate, and if you try it "you're on your own"!!!
But HTH