View Single Post
  #13   Report Post  
Posted to rec.woodworking
Leon[_7_] Leon[_7_] is offline
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 12,155
Default Carbide tipped turning tools

On 10/14/2012 8:28 PM, Larry Jaques wrote:
On Sun, 14 Oct 2012 19:34:45 -0500, Leon lcb11211@swbelldotnet
wrote:

On 10/14/2012 3:09 PM, Dr. Deb wrote:
Gramp's shop wrote:

I know there are a few turners that hang out here from time to time.

I'm a new turner with a Rikon mini lathe and a pretty full set of HSS
tools. Took a bowl turning class a few weeks ago and had a chance to
try out a carbide tipped gouge. Sweet. I've had a few bad catches
using the bowl gouge -- a couple sent the blank flying across the shop.

So ... I'm thinking about adding a carbide gouge to my toolset. Do you
use them? If so, any thoughts about Easy, Hunter or others?

Larry


Carbide has a lot to recommend it. One reason for resistance to the
carbide tools is, as others have said, they are new and us old coggers just
ain't into that new fangled stuff. That aside,

Carbide has its place, but the selection of tools is still limited

With a good jig setup, sharpening is not a chore, (If you think it is, you
really need to get a life).

HSS allows you to put an individual shape on your tools, rather than what
someone else thinks you ought to have.

There is no carbide replacement for the skew. That alone should make you
have a mix of tool types.

I have an Easy Rougher knock off and frankly never use it - finding the
skew does everything better and as quick as the Easy (square bit).


I will say that I have read reviews of Easy Wood Tools "type" tools and
the "knock offs" do not get as good of reviews as those of the Easy Wood
Tools.


If you just paid a gazillion dollars for a bogus tool, you'd hesitate
letting the world know about your inept purchase, wouldn't you? It's
embarrassing. (Unless you returned it immediately.)


Maybe if you paid a gazillion. The knock off I read about was one that
Rockler sells. I saw it on sale for about half the price of an Easy
Wood tool. Way way south of $100. And to put that into perspective I
suspect that most serious wood turners, those that turn daily, probably
pay at least $100 for a typical tool.