Review of Benjamin's Best
I got a 5/8" bowl gouge. It cost $20 plus not including shipping. The
handle is ok lengthwise for me but smaller in diameter than my other bowl gouges. The shaft length is 9 inches but the usable flute length is only 3 3/4 inches. In comparison, my new Packard bowl gouge has a shaft length of 9 3/4 and a usable flute length of 5 3/4. My biggest complaint is the flute itself. It is straight sided--nearly a v-shape. When used head on, the cutting width is narrow. It works ok when cutting with the wings but there is minimal transition between a straight wing cut and a v cut. Similar to having a right and a left narrow skew chisels joined together. So, to me, it is worth about what it cost. -- Gerald Ross Cochran, GA Very funny, Scotty. Now beam down my clothes. |
Review of Benjamin's Best
On Fri, 11 Jan 2008 17:07:49 -0500, Gerald Ross wrote:
I got a 5/8" bowl gouge. It cost $20 plus not including shipping. The handle is ok lengthwise for me but smaller in diameter than my other bowl gouges. The shaft length is 9 inches but the usable flute length is only 3 3/4 inches. In comparison, my new Packard bowl gouge has a shaft length of 9 3/4 and a usable flute length of 5 3/4. My biggest complaint is the flute itself. It is straight sided--nearly a v-shape. When used head on, the cutting width is narrow. It works ok when cutting with the wings but there is minimal transition between a straight wing cut and a v cut. Similar to having a right and a left narrow skew chisels joined together. So, to me, it is worth about what it cost. I must have smaller hands than I thought.. ;~] Might depend on the grind and how it's used? I do a pretty aggressive sweep and don't use the tip/point, so they seem fine to me.. I just ordered 2 more plus a 1" roughing gouge... I'll grind 1 swept and the other more a conventional fingernail and see how it works.. mac Please remove splinters before emailing |
Review of Benjamin's Best
I have one V shaped gouge, and find it works better on the outside of
the bowl than it does on the inside. Also if I get agressive with it, it does clog up some times. I do prefer the U shaped gouges as being better at all purpose cutting. The gouges by Doug Thompson are in my opinion the best ones out there, They are one of the 'lasts 5 times longer' gouges that do actually keep their edges longer than anything else I have used. Their U shaped gouge is very broad, almost like a spindle gouge, and their V shaped gouge is slightly wider than most of the other V shaped gouges I have seen. They are sold unhandled. robo hippy On Jan 11, 5:28*pm, mac davis wrote: On Fri, 11 Jan 2008 17:07:49 -0500, Gerald Ross wrote: I got a 5/8" bowl gouge. It cost $20 plus not including shipping. The handle is ok lengthwise for me but smaller in diameter than my other bowl gouges. The shaft length is 9 inches but the usable flute length is only 3 3/4 inches. In comparison, my new Packard bowl gouge has a shaft length of 9 3/4 and a usable flute length of 5 3/4. My biggest complaint is the flute itself. It is straight sided--nearly a v-shape. When used head on, the cutting width is narrow. It works ok when cutting with the wings but there is minimal transition between a straight wing cut and a v cut. Similar to having a right and a left narrow skew chisels joined together. So, to me, it is worth about what it cost. I must have smaller hands than I thought.. ;~] Might depend on the grind and how it's used? I do a pretty aggressive sweep and don't use the tip/point, so they seem fine to me.. I just ordered 2 more plus a 1" roughing gouge... I'll grind 1 swept and the other more a conventional fingernail and see how it works.. mac Please remove splinters before emailing |
All times are GMT +1. The time now is 02:29 AM. |
Powered by vBulletin® Copyright ©2000 - 2024, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.
Copyright ©2004 - 2014 DIYbanter