Zeddedhed
Established Member
First a little bit of introduction......
A few months ago I bought one of these..
and one of these
all for just under £150 (a bit a bargain methinks).
I also got myself a set of Axminster HSS tools and a copy of Keith Rowleys book.
Since then I've made one of these...
One of these...
a bunch of these
and for a bit of a laugh one of these... (it works by the way)
Then I went to the D&M tool show and watched a demo by a mad man from Record and understood how sharp the tools need to be.
I dug out the bench grinder, sparks flew in the right places and I found out I could make square things round without needing a change of underpants.
More practice with the roughing gouge followed until I cold do this fairly easily
Then I had a go with an oval skew and changed my pants.
Anyway, I now want to try and make some small knobs for tools and furniture pieces.
I'm guessing that the right thing to do is to use my lovely chuck but despite reading and watching for the last few days can't find much info on actually using the damned things.
I understand that they can grip wood in compression or expansion via a tenon or 'mortice', dovetailed or parallel depending on the jaws.
I've also seen some vids of people doing this
Is this OK?
What is the normal procedure for turning a knob?
Any help (or weeping and wailing) accepted
A few months ago I bought one of these..
and one of these
all for just under £150 (a bit a bargain methinks).
I also got myself a set of Axminster HSS tools and a copy of Keith Rowleys book.
Since then I've made one of these...
One of these...
a bunch of these
and for a bit of a laugh one of these... (it works by the way)
Then I went to the D&M tool show and watched a demo by a mad man from Record and understood how sharp the tools need to be.
I dug out the bench grinder, sparks flew in the right places and I found out I could make square things round without needing a change of underpants.
More practice with the roughing gouge followed until I cold do this fairly easily
Then I had a go with an oval skew and changed my pants.
Anyway, I now want to try and make some small knobs for tools and furniture pieces.
I'm guessing that the right thing to do is to use my lovely chuck but despite reading and watching for the last few days can't find much info on actually using the damned things.
I understand that they can grip wood in compression or expansion via a tenon or 'mortice', dovetailed or parallel depending on the jaws.
I've also seen some vids of people doing this
Is this OK?
What is the normal procedure for turning a knob?
Any help (or weeping and wailing) accepted