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wrote:
Hi all,
I'm new to turning (so that may be the problem here...). I've been
practicing on some mahogany I had around and have gotten fairly
successful. Well, I picked up a block of walnut and haven't been so
lucky with it. I'm trying to hollow out a shallow bowl and my
fingernail gouge quickly catches and throws the bowl off the lathe.
This is bad. I'd really appreciate some help here. Here's what I've
observed:
1. The stock is being held by a nova chuck expanded into a recess in
the bottom of the bowl. It's held pretty tightly.
2. My 1/2" fingernail gouge is brand new, sharpened with a tormek
jig. Sure seems sharp to me. I've never used it before, so technique
could easily be the problem.
3. The walnut is very dry.
4. If I use a scraper, I can be pretty successful with the hollowing.
5. If I use the gouge, it catches brutally and throws the bowl.
Any thoughts?
Many thanks,
Joe
About the gouge -- is it a fingernail grind on a bowl (deep flute) gouge
or a spindle gouge. What angle is it ground to?
--
Gerald Ross, Cochran, GA
To reply add the numerals "13" before the "at"
............................................
Phobia: what's left after drinking 2
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