First tries at segmenting and CA/BLO

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aldwardo

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Apr 16, 2009
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24
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IA
These are pens #4 and 5. I wanted to play around and try segmenting. The design is haphazard, and overdone, but I was just looking for experience. They were also my first try at CA/BLO. That is slick. I have a lot of room for improvement. After only 5 pens I am noticing that my bushings are wearing thinner. I need to get a nice calapers. Would a cheap one be good enough to measure that small of an increment? Sorry, I am full of questions, now for the picture:
3464259182_7cb1ff93d5.jpg
 
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kirkfranks

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Nov 23, 2006
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Salisbury, MD, USA.
Nice job on the segmenting. Especially for pen #4 and 5.

On the caliper question many folks here get the low cost digital type. Yes they will work fine. I got mine from Rockler on sale less than $20.00 if I remember correctly. Harbor freight has them onsale often for a little less than what I paid and many are happy with them.
 

wdcav1952

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Mar 18, 2004
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Montgomery, Pennsylvania, USA.
Rod,

Nice work. You will find that most bushings are semi-disposable items. They wear out like everything else.

As Re the calipers - My cheap HF digital calipers are more accurate than I am!!
 

rwyoung

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Feb 21, 2009
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Lawrence, KS
Get calipers with metal jaws and a good lock for the slide. Use them to make a relative measurement by checking against the pen hardware, not a nominal measurement somebody wrote down. That way, the absolute accuracy of the calipers is not at issue. A $7 pair can work as well as a $50 pair.
 

DurocShark

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Jul 26, 2008
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Anaheim, CA
I'm quite happy with the Cen-Tech digital calipers that Harbor Freight sells. They go for under $10 when on sale.

Honestly, they don't have to be accurate, just repeatable. It can be off by 10 feet, as long as it's *always* off by the same 10 feet. I have no idea if these are truly accurate, but they are repeatable and work great for turning.

Just remember to turn the lathe off when measuring. DAMHIKT
 

leehljp

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Feb 6, 2005
Messages
9,329
Location
Tunica, Mississippi,
Get calipers with metal jaws and a good lock for the slide. Use them to make a relative measurement by checking against the pen hardware, not a nominal measurement somebody wrote down. That way, the absolute accuracy of the calipers is not at issue. A $7 pair can work as well as a $50 pair.

I agree completely. I had one "plastic" set that someone gave me (or left for me) once and I did not find them very helpful. Personally, (as RW mentioned) I would stick with metal ones.
 
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