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Woodturning (rec.crafts.woodturning) To discuss tools, techniques, styles, materials, shows and competitions, education and educational materials related to woodturning. All skill levels are welcome, from art turners to production turners, beginners to masters. |
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#1
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Springett Inspired Exploration Using SketchUp
On Tue, 3 Jan 2012 7:41:29 -0600, charlie b wrote
(in message ): http://web.hypersurf.com/~charlie2/T...tohedronsTOC.h tml This is a swell concept. I'll bet that if you did this with 2 different woods and a paper-split turning, you would not have to cut the pieces apart, just split them and then clean up the joint before re-gluing. tom koehler -- I will find a way or make one. |
#2
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Springett Inspired Exploration Using SketchUp
No cutting the parts apart required. The use of a "paper glue joint" -
glue on both faces to be joined with a piece of newspaper between them, also with some glue on it, creates a plane at the joint that holds for turning - but can be opened up by starting with a ultility knife to begin opening the joint, then using a kitchen knife to open the joint of completely. Leaves a little paper on each joint face that's easy to sand off. |
#3
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Springett Inspired Exploration Using SketchUp
On Tue, 3 Jan 2012 21:41:38 -0600, charlie b wrote
(in message ): No cutting the parts apart required. The use of a "paper glue joint" - glue on both faces to be joined with a piece of newspaper between them, also with some glue on it, creates a plane at the joint that holds for turning - but can be opened up by starting with a ultility knife to begin opening the joint, then using a kitchen knife to open the joint of completely. Leaves a little paper on each joint face that's easy to sand off. Thanks. That's what I was trying to say, just did not explain what I meant. The biggest trick, then, is getting the symmetry just right, so that when the parts are reassembled 90 degrees apart, they still match up well. Maybe a little adjusting the fit-up with some sandpaper? tom koehler -- I will find a way or make one. |
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