Rounding Question
Mon, Jun 12, 2006, 6:15am George@least (George) doth sayeth:
If the mallets are indeed pine, or possibly spruce, you'll be remaking them often. Ring porous woods make lousy mallets. Also make splintery turning when the tool's not sharp and the pressure tries to compensate. You're supposed to be planing with the gouge, not gouging or rasping. Don't do it Norm's way, do it Roy's way and it'll surprise you how easy it is. I 've use hand planes on the lathe, both powered and un, but I wouldn't trust two spinning things in conflict, controlled by my hand. Have to be some serious motion-limiting jig in use. Pine, spruce, fir. All the same family, so didn't bother to differentiate. I've got some I made from what I know is pine, years ago, and they're all holding up well, except for the one my son's dog sneaked out of the shop and used for a chew toy - and I even still use that one. So, "often" is relative. Yeah, I know how to use a gouge, it was just taking too long. I don't see using a power plane with the lathe running as any worse than using hand plane. I think the hand plane might tend to catch in a know, where a power plane wouldn't. JOAT Politician \Pol`i*ti"cian\, n. Latin for career criminal |
All times are GMT +1. The time now is 07:59 AM. |
Powered by vBulletin® Copyright ©2000 - 2024, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.
Copyright ©2004 - 2014 DIYbanter