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Neil Larson July 15th 07 08:16 PM

Bloodwood
 
Any ever try to do much with this stuff other than pens? I did a couple
decent spindle turnings that were ok, then tried a platter. What a mess. Dry
wood, newly sharpened tools, but huge chipouts and hard as hell to cut.
Anyne have anyone idea?



steven raphael July 16th 07 04:24 AM

Bloodwood
 
I have used it in segmented turnings and it seems to work well for me with
sharp tools.

I have not tried turning bowls or platers out of bloodwood yet so I do not
know how well it turns for that purpose.

Steven Raphael
Ithaca MI.
http://www.geocities.com/steven_raph...turnings1.html
"Neil Larson" wrote in message
...
Any ever try to do much with this stuff other than pens? I did a couple
decent spindle turnings that were ok, then tried a platter. What a mess.
Dry wood, newly sharpened tools, but huge chipouts and hard as hell to
cut. Anyne have anyone idea?




ebd July 16th 07 02:01 PM

Bloodwood
 

I've turned a number of bowls from Bloodwood, both unsegmented and
segmented. I've never had any problem with it. Quite the contrary, I
found that it cuts smooth and polishes to a fantastic finish. What
I've worked with was purchased slightly green and air dried very
slowly. Is the stuff you're working with kiln dried. That might make a
difference. Also, I would guess that a lot of wood might be called
Bloodwood. Probably anything that's red and unidentified. Are you sure
what you have is the genus Brosimum?


mac davis July 16th 07 03:52 PM

Bloodwood
 
On Sun, 15 Jul 2007 14:16:19 -0500, "Neil Larson"
wrote:

Any ever try to do much with this stuff other than pens? I did a couple
decent spindle turnings that were ok, then tried a platter. What a mess. Dry
wood, newly sharpened tools, but huge chipouts and hard as hell to cut.
Anyne have anyone idea?

It usually turns very well with sharp tools and smells wonderful..
It's one of my favorites for goblets, also.. holds beading and other details
really well...

IMO, it should be a bit "hard to cut", which is why it "machines" well and holds
detail...but I've never had any unusual chipping with it..

OTOH, I find that wood being a product of nature, no 2 pieces are alike.. part
of what makes turning unique...

I just did several purpleheart pens and they were not only various shapes of
purple, but some was tighter grain, some held detail well, etc...


mac

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