A copper teaser

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skiprat

Passed Away Mar 22, 2022
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A copper teaser - Done

Hi all,
Wanted to try something new and these are the progress pics so far.
It consists of two 16mm threaded studs, a piece of Emerald Green pr ( from you know who:wink: ), one spare brass tube from an unkown kit and a length of 7mm brass tube from a hobby shop.

The pics show the parts so far and a dry fit of the cap. Before I glue up the cap, I'll heat it up and clamp it to ensure a perfect fit between the copper and pr. I'll glue it when it's cooled down.
The brass tube is plugged completely with a piece of acrylic ( not pr)
This is then drilled and tapped.

Hopefully I'll be able to finish it tomorrow:biggrin:
 

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Woodlvr

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OK it is TOMORROW, where is it?:tongue::wink: I would like to have 1/8th of your creativity skills. Cannot wait to see your new creation. SHOWOFF:wink::biggrin: (OOPS is my jealousy showing?)
 

altaciii

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I'm with Mike. Where's the beef? I searched all the posts and still no final picture. For the life of me, I couldn't see what you see in those pieces. I turned the pics upside down and sideways and still no idea of what you see and where its going. They say a sculpture can look at a piece of granite and see a form in it. A wood carver can look at a piece of wood and see something in it. What do you see when you walk through Lowes or home depot?
 

NewLondon88

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I'm with Mike and Alex.

DON'T MAKE US COME OVER THERE, MISTER!! :tongue:

__________________________________________________
Life is like a box of chocolates. You never know what you're
going to get until you pick one up and find that someone
already bit half of it off and put it back in the box.
 

skiprat

Passed Away Mar 22, 2022
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Geesh!!!! patience, patience!!!!:biggrin: It's only a ......... pen:tongue:

It's finished at last, but it didn't give up without a struggle. Everything that could go wrong did. I remade the body as it blew up when I got distracted for a nanosecond:mad:.

I was going to do the same angle thing in the nib, but thought that it was too short and would look too busy.
The hardest part was holding it while I turned it as the angled end meant I couldn't use the tailstock. The taper in the body was done ONLY with sandpaper:eek::biggrin:

I like it and hope you guys do too:biggrin:
 

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johnnycnc

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Nice work, Skip!
The colors go good together,and the design is pretty classy too.
Your skills are awesome!
Thanks for sharing it with us.:biggrin:
 

ldb2000

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Geeze Skippy , you are making it harder to steal .... eerrr ... learn from your work :biggrin::tongue::biggrin:
Oh by the way , Beautiful pen
 
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RichB

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That is a beautiful thing of beauty. What an artistic imagination to come up with it. Just plain sharp! It is so great I can't come up with the right words for it. Thanks
 

Woodlvr

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FANTASTIC WORK. I cannot see how you come up with these beautiful creations, but you create awesome pens.
 
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bitshird

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Steven, Sir my hat's off to you, that is an outstanding pen, great design and execution, I absolutely hate machining copper, and you did it so beautifully.
 

altaciii

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Like I said before, "I couldn't see the final product by just looking at the pieces." What a wonderful job. The master has struck again. Steve one day I hope to come up with some ideas of my own and create masterpieces such as this. GREAT JOB.
 

mitchm

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Steve, another awesome creation!!! Stunning and "moerse mooi"!!! Someday I need to trek up north and bring you a Castle and Boerie so that I can breathe some of that creative air you have somewhere up there.....hopefully you can give me some in a bottle to take doen south again!! :) :biggrin:
 

izaks

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This is what happens when creativity and skill are put together... really like it!

Izaks
 

skiprat

Passed Away Mar 22, 2022
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Thanks:biggrin: You guys are good for my ego:redface:


This next bit is particularly for Butch. 'IF' you want to get a more slender taper in your nib. And I'm certainly not dissing your work:biggrin:
Here's a pic of the nib before being cut off the stock. It has 4 holes drilled in it. First, I drill a 2.5mm as deep as possible from one end. Then after some sketching out and measuring, I drill a 3mm, then 4mm ( for spring )then 6mm (6.9mm if using a brass tube) in the other end.
I find that drilling the small 2.5mm blind hole first is important. More often than not, I break the bit if doing a through hole, esp in steel. :wink:

The last pic is an easy way to accurately thread the parts using taps and dies in the lathe. ( Lathe OFF of course) I learnt this trick from Steve Bedair's site. You can do it on just about any lathe, metal or wood.
Simply fully extend the tailstock quill so it spins freely. Some wood lathes, you'd just remove the screw that stops it from turning.
It doesn't matter which way round you hold the tool/material.

I wear a pair of rubber gardening gloves and then hold one chuck in each hand and just go for it. Clear and 'break' the shavings about every quarter turn. Lots of WD40 or oil
I think using Tommy bars ( or chuck keys ) for leverage is a bad idea for small fine threads :biggrin::wink:

Thanks again for the nice comments:)
 

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ldb2000

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Thanks Steven . On rollerball and some ballpoint nibs I make a smoother longer taper like this pen
1_kitlesskit.jpg

but on some ballpoint nibs I like the more blunt look , it makes it look a little more interesting to my crooked eyes . I work the other way around though . First I turn the tennon that will go into the lower tube , then I drill the spring pocket hole then the hole for the refill point from the end of the bar stock , then I turn the shape of the nib so I can polish the larger diameter that will be against the collet chuck , then I part it off the bar stock and polish the very tip last (I hold it by the tennon that goes into the lower tube) , on the wood lathe I find it easier to do it this way with the Brass and Aluminum . It sounds a little confusing but it is easier for me this way . I will let you know if it works on the metal lathe when I start playing with harder metals . But thanks for the tips . I can use all the help I can get .

http://www.penturners.org/photos/index.php?n=6164
 
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furini

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Skip
all the words have been used but that is a fantastic pen - definitely something to aspire to!
Cheers
Stewart
 
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