What skew to use?

Signed-In Members Don't See This Ad
Status
Not open for further replies.

eskimo

Member
Joined
Jun 14, 2007
Messages
204
Location
Roswell, Georgia, USA.
I've been using a 1/2" Oval skew for a couple of months and am still getting a lot of "catches", even with sharpening before each blank (and many times, again while on the same blank). Some of it is due to the type of wood, but I wonder if some of it may be that the skew is fairly light and I might have better success with a heavier 1" Skew (Christmas is coming and the LOL said a Bandsaw is out of the question).

I've read the articles and viewed the videos on this site and feel my method is pretty solid, as I will have 6 or 7 clean passes, then get a catch & take a chunk out of the blank.

Any thoughts would be appreciated.

Thanks,

Bob
 
Signed-In Members Don't See This Ad

CrazyBear

Member
Joined
Oct 15, 2007
Messages
458
Location
Alexandria, Loch lomond, United Kingdom.
I used to use a scraper or gouge to take my blanks down. Now I use a 1" skew. The finish is far better and I feel more in control of the tool rather than the tool controling me.

I am probably doing it wrong but I usualy have the Skew blade vertical at about a 45 degree angle to the blank. This takes a nice even cut.

Having said that it was a Bi%*h to get used to and I have to make doubly sure there are no nicks in my tool rest to catch the skew.

I would personally recomend going for the bigger skew but other more experienced turners may differ
 

rherrell

Member
Joined
Aug 22, 2006
Messages
6,334
Location
Pilot Mountain, NC
You might have better results with a larger skew ,however, I use a 1/2" straight skew with no problems. All I can say is practice,practice,practice. And then do it some more!
 

Rmartin

Member
Joined
Jan 14, 2007
Messages
1,263
Location
Columbus, Ga, USA.
I use a round nosed scrapper in conjunction with a straight skew, and about ten other turning tools. Many of my tools started out as one thing, and I used a grinder to shape them into something else.
 

GBusardo

Member
Joined
Dec 8, 2005
Messages
1,240
Location
Beachwood, NJ, USA.
I like to blame the wood [:D] Some of blanks give me way more trouble than others. I am quite sure eveyone has a catch or a blow out sometimes. Recently I was turning a Red Heart blank and everything was going fine, even better than normal. I must have gotten cocky cause it all went to hell with one huge blow out. To this day I have no clue what went wrong, I didn't feel a catch, the wood was coming off the skew in two or three inch long ribbons... A few curse words and I am reaching for the CA
 

Firefyter-emt

Member
Joined
Mar 30, 2006
Messages
2,903
Location
Putnam, Connecticut, USA.
I turn like Hugh does, at about a 45 degree angle to slice the wood rather in a "hand plane" kind of approach. Just for kick, I tried it like the hand plane the other day and I hated it. I get nice little curlies my way and can even "fill" my lamp at the lathe with PR if I am truning plastic! (This is one reason I put a florescent bulb in it!)

Maybe you could try the 45 approach and see if it works for you. My 12 year old got the hand of it with a 1" skew after a few minutes of practice.
 

Fred

Member
Joined
Feb 18, 2007
Messages
3,557
Location
N.E. Atlanta, Georgia U.S.A.
I have found that the skew is a great tool. Of course I have been using one for years and have a great respect for the end results. I especially like being able to skip several sanding grits since the blanks have been "scraped"

One thing I noticed in using the skew is that I have far better cutting results when turning at a much higher speed, say 2500 or on out to 3300 RPM. Of course one must address the edge of the tool to the wood with a great deal more care.

I use the 1" oval skew from Robert Sorby and keep the edge 'scary sharp.' I however do not address the wood at much more than a nice level edge across the tool rest. I changed the flat edge tool rest our several years ago and now use the 1" round tool rest. Catches on the tool rest are a thing of the past and the tool glides across under my control. Even my square edged tools handle far better on the round tool rest ... IMHO! [;)]
 
Status
Not open for further replies.
Top Bottom