Home |
Search |
Today's Posts |
![]() |
|
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. |
Reply |
|
LinkBack | Thread Tools | Display Modes |
|
#1
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
There is a tool support that replaces your tool rest that holds the
blade and the handle to hold the blade. Make sure you get the one that will work with the mini blades because they are thinner. Some sellers may still have the older support which requires an 'adapter' to work with the mini blades. I also have the kel hollowing tools so I use one handle for both However, unless someone shows you how to use them I recommend the Mahoney video. Phil Lackey wrote: Could someone tell me if you need to purchase anything other than the new mini blades to use on the regular McNaughton system? Thanks Phil "william kossack" wrote in message ... I have both the mini and the large McNaughton blades. I tend to use the minis more often but that is because finding chunks large enough for the large blades is difficult. Wood sellers don't keep stuff large enough for the large McNaughton blades. Shoot in Denver they don't even have pieces large enough to bother coring. I got my center savers last year during the summer after I had collected most of my wood. This spring I'm going to make sure to cut bigger pieces at the tree dump so I can make better use of them. Lyn J. Mangiameli wrote: Leo, the problem is that though Oneway offers systems for lathes of various swings, they aren't making smaller knives. Only the Mini system of knives for the Kelton are going to perform the tasks that Andrew is most concerned about: maximum yeild from purchased woods; and smaller blanks (he mentions 9 inch and only 4 inches deep). The Oneway will at best only have one knive that will allow for a normal bowl shaped core in the sizes he discusses, and it will require a larger kerf. The Kelton will offer him more cores and smaller kerfs (with the mini set). I've encouraged Oneway to offer a smaller knive (about two years ago), but they haven't seen fit to go in that direction. BTW, the two smaller Oneway systems only offer one knife, which is pretty limiting. I do like the Oneway for large corings and find it to be the safest and easist for that purpose. I tend to go with the Woodcut for coring medium sized blanks because I can very quickly set it up, reliably get two cores, and take it down with little fuss and muss. The Kelton excels at the smaller stuff and the unconventional, though I know a lot of folks are quite content using it for big stuff as well (Bill Grumbine and Mike Mahoney both stand out as examples). Obviously very few turners are going to get all of them, but I do think one's individual needs can go a long way towards pointing in the direction of one or another as being most suitable. For Andrew, particulary since he already has many of the Kelton components, getting a set of mini blades and the Mahoney video is likely a good path for him. Lyn Leo Van Der Loo wrote: Hi Andy Andy I do not have a coring system yet, but I have seen the use of the 3 systems that are most used and heard the comments of the turners that owned more than one system, and one of the comments that was uniform in the use of the Oneway system was, it's so easy to use there is no comparison. The way our turners club president put it, (he has the McNaughton and the Oneway systems) "using the McNaughton is an adventure" and the Oneway was all production, effortless. Also the view of a local member that makes his living, turning thousands of bowls, mostly Big leaf Maple, Australian and tropical burl wood, "I could not do it if I still had to use the McNaughton". Oneway now has the large coring systems, a 16" and 20" and 24". New now, they have also mini systems, a 10" and 12". I have an E-mail address here of a review of the Oneway system so you can have the opinion of some one else as well. http://www.lehighvalleywoodturners.com/page26.html By the way I have no monetary or other connections or interests with Oneway. I am just a very satisfied customer. Have fun and take care Leo Van Der Loo Andrew Barss wrote: I briefly owned the McNasughton coring system, and found it hard to use -- it stalled my 1.5HP Nova often, and I couldn't control it easily. But I've now realized that -- given the sort of wood I like to turn (burls and exotics) -- the amount I'm losing by not using a corer quickly adds up. So I'm reconsidering getting such a system. Most of what I turn is pretty small -- bowls in the 9" x 9 x 4 down to e.g., small boxes from blackwood clarinet-bell rejects. So... does anyone have experience with a corer system that will fairly easily let me save cores from pretty small pieces of wood? Thanks, Andy Barss |
Reply |
Thread Tools | Search this Thread |
Display Modes | |
|
|
![]() |
||||
Thread | Forum | |||
Barry walnut bowl problems | Woodturning | |||
Walnut Bowl Problems | Woodturning | |||
Coring Systems | Woodturning | |||
New system nightmare | UK diy | |||
mains Hot water, and do I convert open heating to a closed heating system | UK diy |