gtriever
Member
For the hobbyist, pen turning can get expensive in a hurry, especially with the cost of the better pen kits. I know everybody (or most everybody) will keep a good stock of blanks on hand, but what about kits/other parts?
Being new at this, I bought extra tubes for those Ooopsie!! moments. That got me to thinking about the following question:
Do you try to stock a large number of kits and turn/assemble at the same time to keep an inventory or finished pens, or do you stock a few (in my case that might be 2 or 3) of a kit and a large number of extra tubes and "pre-turn" a greater quantity of blanks within .01 or so for final sizing and finish when needed? For the little guys, that seems like it'd be a way to keep the skills fresh without breaking the bank. What do you folks say?
Being new at this, I bought extra tubes for those Ooopsie!! moments. That got me to thinking about the following question:
Do you try to stock a large number of kits and turn/assemble at the same time to keep an inventory or finished pens, or do you stock a few (in my case that might be 2 or 3) of a kit and a large number of extra tubes and "pre-turn" a greater quantity of blanks within .01 or so for final sizing and finish when needed? For the little guys, that seems like it'd be a way to keep the skills fresh without breaking the bank. What do you folks say?