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#1
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drill attachment
I have some wooden banister rods, the ends of which I want to grind
down to a half sphere. Is there an attachment for a power drill which will give me a half sphere? What is this tool called and where can I find one? I was considering putting them on a lathe, but they are 10 feet long. I don't want to take them off, as this is work, but maybe this might be another solution. Any suggestions, or better yet, links to pics or videos on how best to do this? |
#2
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drill attachment
On Sat, 3 Sep 2011 14:48:52 -0700 (PDT), Deodiaus
wrote: I have some wooden banister rods, the ends of which I want to grind down to a half sphere. Is there an attachment for a power drill which will give me a half sphere? What is this tool called and where can I find one? I was considering putting them on a lathe, but they are 10 feet long. I don't want to take them off, as this is work, but maybe this might be another solution. Any suggestions, or better yet, links to pics or videos on how best to do this? Look for rounding dowel ends. Here's one. http://www.binkyswoodworking.com/PegTip.php --Vic |
#3
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drill attachment
On Sep 3, 5:35*pm, Vic Smith wrote:
On Sat, 3 Sep 2011 14:48:52 -0700 (PDT), Deodiaus wrote: I have some wooden banister rods, the ends of which I want to grind down to a half sphere. Is there an attachment for a power drill which will give me a half sphere? What is this tool called and where can I find one? I was considering putting them on a lathe, but they are 10 feet long. I don't want to take them off, as this is work, but maybe this might be another solution. Any suggestions, or better yet, links to pics or videos on how best to do this? Look for rounding dowel ends. Here's one.http://www.binkyswoodworking.com/PegTip.php --Vic Great idea, I never would have thought of it, but it's perfect. Hope the OP tries it and lets us know how it works out for him. |
#4
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drill attachment
Deodiaus wrote the following:
I have some wooden banister rods, the ends of which I want to grind down to a half sphere. Is there an attachment for a power drill which will give me a half sphere? What is this tool called and where can I find one? I was considering putting them on a lathe, but they are 10 feet long. I don't want to take them off, as this is work, but maybe this might be another solution. Any suggestions, or better yet, links to pics or videos on how best to do this? Without the proper tools. Files and sandpaper. -- Bill In Hamptonburgh, NY In the original Orange County. Est. 1683 To email, remove the double zeroes after @ |
#6
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drill attachment
On Sep 3, 8:23*pm, Vic Smith wrote:
On Sat, 3 Sep 2011 17:32:19 -0700 (PDT), "hr(bob) " wrote: On Sep 3, 5:35*pm, Vic Smith wrote: On Sat, 3 Sep 2011 14:48:52 -0700 (PDT), Deodiaus wrote: I have some wooden banister rods, the ends of which I want to grind down to a half sphere. Is there an attachment for a power drill which will give me a half sphere? What is this tool called and where can I find one? I was considering putting them on a lathe, but they are 10 feet long. I don't want to take them off, as this is work, but maybe this might be another solution. Any suggestions, or better yet, links to pics or videos on how best to do this? Look for rounding dowel ends. Here's one.http://www.binkyswoodworking.com/PegTip.php --Vic Great idea, I never would have thought of it, but it's perfect. Hope the OP tries it and lets us know how it works out for him. It is. I only looked because I wondered how to do it perfectly. Most of the big rounded stuff I've seen was done on a lathe, then the stub gets cut off and it's sanded down. I've used a different method for rounding edges. The possible problem with using the router is expense if you don't have the bits and router. If the OP's bannisters are 3" he'd need a 1 1/2" rounding bit. Don't even know if they make them. I'm not quite clear what his purpose is with these, but if there's room I'd go after them with a belt sander. That's what I use to round edges. Making it almost perfectly round would take patience and a light touch. You could use a rasp, then smoother files and sandpaper to do the same thing, just takes longer. Check this out http://www.traditionalwoodworker.com...-Rasps/product... Love to have them at my workbench, but it will never happen. --Vic- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - Wonder if the $76.95 includes shipping??? |
#7
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drill attachment
great, but my banisters are not round, rather egg shaped, and the flat
end is on the bottom so that it is attached to the railing. The easiest way I see to get this done would be to build an end piece which I would use to mount on a drill. I was thinking of finding an old coke bottle, cutting it in the center, and putting a roofing nail in the short end. Then pouring concrete into it, and stuffing in a old tennis ball until it sets. Then put this on a drill and using it as a circular file. |
#8
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drill attachment
What I really want is a "concave router" bit? Is that the name?
Basically, something that looks like an cave with teeth. I am sure that some Dutch craftman must have a dozen of them if I know where to look. Basically, something to attach to the end of my drill so that I can round off the ends of the banister. My banister cross section is an ellipse, about 1 inch high and 2 inches long. |
#9
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drill attachment
On Sun, 25 Sep 2011 11:54:10 -0700 (PDT), Deodiaus wrote:
What I really want is a "concave router" bit? Is that the name? Basically, something that looks like an cave with teeth. I am sure that some Dutch craftman must have a dozen of them if I know where to look. A "round-over bit" bit will cut a quarter-round profile (two passes gets a half-cylinder). Basically, something to attach to the end of my drill so that I can round off the ends of the banister. There are bits intended for this, but you're nuts if you think you're going to do this with a drill. My banister cross section is an ellipse, about 1 inch high and 2 inches long. There are all sorts of router and shaper bits around to do this sort of thing, but again, forget the drill. It's not going to work and you're likely to hurt yourself. |
#10
Posted to alt.home.repair,rec.woodworking
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drill attachment
I agree that working with a round-over bit is asking for trouble.
In a hardware store, I saw a drill grinder attachment which had a concave hole, and was thinking that this might do the trick. I was thinking of installing this on a lathe if that's what it takes. BTW, how did they use to get a nice head on a wooden base ball bat ? I suppose that they had some sort of lathe which would hold the base while they could sand the ends. On Sep 25, 6:14*pm, " wrote: On Sun, 25 Sep 2011 11:54:10 -0700 wrote: What I really want is a "concave router" bit? *Is that the name? Basically, something that looks like an cave with teeth. I am sure that some Dutch craftman must have a dozen of them if I know where to look. A "round-over bit" bit will cut a quarter-round profile (two passes gets a half-cylinder). Basically, something to attach to the end of my drill so that I can round off the ends of the banister. There are bits intended for this, but you're nuts if you think you're going to do this with a drill. My banister cross section is an ellipse, about 1 inch high and 2 inches long. There are all sorts of router and shaper bits around to do this sort of thing, but again, forget the drill. *It's not going to work and you're likely to hurt yourself. |
#11
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drill attachment
On Sep 26, 12:23*am, Deodiaus wrote:
I agree that working with a round-over bit is asking for trouble. In a hardware store, I saw a drill grinder attachment which had a concave hole, and was thinking that this might do the trick. I was thinking of installing this on a lathe if that's what it takes. BTW, how did they use to get a nice head on a wooden base ball bat ? I suppose that they had some sort of lathe which would hold the base while they could sand the ends. Skilled woodturner with a skew chisel who did nothing but turn bats all day. |
#12
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drill attachment
On 9/25/2011 11:56 PM, Father Haskell wrote:
On Sep 26, 12:23 am, wrote: I agree that working with a round-over bit is asking for trouble. In a hardware store, I saw a drill grinder attachment which had a concave hole, and was thinking that this might do the trick. I was thinking of installing this on a lathe if that's what it takes. BTW, how did they use to get a nice head on a wooden base ball bat ? I suppose that they had some sort of lathe which would hold the base while they could sand the ends. Skilled woodturner with a skew chisel who did nothing but turn bats all day. More likely a robot programed to turn bats. |
#13
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drill attachment
Deodiaus wrote:
What I really want is a "concave router" bit? Is that the name? Basically, something that looks like an cave with teeth. I am sure that some Dutch craftman must have a dozen of them if I know where to look. Basically, something to attach to the end of my drill so that I can round off the ends of the banister. My banister cross section is an ellipse, about 1 inch high and 2 inches long. All you want to do is round off the end(s)? What you want is called a "rasp". A 4-in-hand - aka "shoemaker's rasp" - will work nicely. Especially if you use a hammer and chisel to get to rough shape. -- dadiOH ____________________________ dadiOH's dandies v3.06... ....a help file of info about MP3s, recording from LP/cassette and tips & tricks on this and that. Get it at http://mysite.verizon.net/xico |
#14
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drill attachment
Deodiaus posted for all of us...
What I really want is a "concave router" bit? Is that the name? Basically, something that looks like an cave with teeth. I am sure that some Dutch craftman must have a dozen of them if I know where to look. Basically, something to attach to the end of my drill so that I can round off the ends of the banister. My banister cross section is an ellipse, about 1 inch high and 2 inches long. I have only read to this point so... Try a plug cutter with the appropriate inside diameter. -- Tekkie |
#15
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drill attachment
On 9/26/2011 5:29 AM, Leon wrote:
On 9/25/2011 11:56 PM, Father Haskell wrote: On Sep 26, 12:23 am, wrote: I agree that working with a round-over bit is asking for trouble. In a hardware store, I saw a drill grinder attachment which had a concave hole, and was thinking that this might do the trick. I was thinking of installing this on a lathe if that's what it takes. BTW, how did they use to get a nice head on a wooden base ball bat ? I suppose that they had some sort of lathe which would hold the base while they could sand the ends. Skilled woodturner with a skew chisel who did nothing but turn bats all day. More likely a robot programed to turn bats. Yea, if you define a CNC lathe as a robot - rough turning 90 seconds. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ov3awRWfVJc Many bats are still made by hand, though. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FIr3ES8Cwi8 |
#16
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drill attachment
On Sun, 25 Sep 2011 21:23:37 -0700 (PDT), Deodiaus
wrote: BTW, how did they use to get a nice head on a wooden base ball bat ? I suppose that they had some sort of lathe which would hold the base while they could sand the ends. If "How It's Made" or"How Do they Do That" runs on one of your cable TV channels, check the episodes for "baseball bat". One has the making of the Louisville Slugger and another covers making aluminum bats. The wooden bat has the handle end held in place on the lathe by a point tailstock John |
#17
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drill attachment
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#18
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drill attachment
On 9/26/2011 1:29 PM, Just Wondering wrote:
On 9/26/2011 5:29 AM, Leon wrote: On 9/25/2011 11:56 PM, Father Haskell wrote: On Sep 26, 12:23 am, wrote: I agree that working with a round-over bit is asking for trouble. In a hardware store, I saw a drill grinder attachment which had a concave hole, and was thinking that this might do the trick. I was thinking of installing this on a lathe if that's what it takes. BTW, how did they use to get a nice head on a wooden base ball bat ? I suppose that they had some sort of lathe which would hold the base while they could sand the ends. Skilled woodturner with a skew chisel who did nothing but turn bats all day. More likely a robot programed to turn bats. Yea, if you define a CNC lathe as a robot - rough turning 90 seconds. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ov3awRWfVJc Huh? This guy (gone Batty) seems to have more than one way to kill a bat: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LoKn1...eature=related -- Jack Add Life to your Days not Days to your Life. http://jbstein.com |
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