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John Gbur March 15th 09 01:20 AM

Rough Turning Spindle Blanks
 
Does anyone rough turn their spindle blanks. I am asking mainly for the
turning stock I cut myself that starts as green wood. I was thinking of
rough turning some of the partially dryed stock. I was thinking that would
save time when I go to do a project and allow it to dry faster as well. I
was concerned it might move or crack more.

I normally seal my spindle stock with gulf wax (Parrafin). I was thinking
it would rough turn it and then reseal the ends and then store it until its
ready for use.

Let me know if any others are doing this and how the results are. I do
plenty of bowls twice turned but haven't done that with green spindle stock
yet.

Thanks, John Gbur


Arch March 15th 09 01:46 AM

Rough Turning Spindle Blanks
 

Hi John, As soon as the gum hardens, I chop the branches and bark from
green Norfolk Is. pine logs. Then I rough to round between centers with
a spindle turning gouge. Then I slather liquid dish washing soap diluted
1:2 all over the rounds. They dry without cracking if kept out of sun &
rain.


Turn to Safety, Arch
Fortiter


http://community.webtv.net/almcc/MacsMusings




Ecnerwal[_2_] March 15th 09 02:33 PM

Rough Turning Spindle Blanks
 
In article ,
"John Gbur" wrote:

Does anyone rough turn their spindle blanks. I am asking mainly for the
turning stock I cut myself that starts as green wood. I was thinking of
rough turning some of the partially dryed stock. I was thinking that would
save time when I go to do a project and allow it to dry faster as well. I
was concerned it might move or crack more.


Yeah, I'll make cylinders form firewood if I don't have anything I need
to make right now. They go a bit oval, but they would have done that
drying anyway. They may split, but they probably would have done that
anyway, and this way you only have the work of roughing into them when
they do split. And when you need to make something, it's faster to grab
a pre-roughed cylinder and dive into making what you wanted to make than
to start with roughing the hunk of firewood.

--
Cats, coffee, chocolate...vices to live by


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