karlkuehn
Banned
You know, with all the money I've been spending on lathes, saws, drills, more lathes, sanders and pressure pots and everything else, I'm most excited about my new cheapie Ryobi 8" bench grinder. I bought a Norton white aluminum oxide 150 grit wheel to replace the coarse wheel that came on the grinder. All told, I'm into the grinder for about $95.
I just went through every lathe tool that I own, grinding and reshaping edges. For the last year, I've been hand-sharpening with a 1000 grit Japanese water stone, which I've gotten pretty good at, but what a gigantic waste of time! By using the flat stone for so long, all of my tools had lost any semblance of a hollow grind, which has really been creating some long sharpening sessions in the last few months.
Now, I grind the edge on the tools with a nice hollow, and then finish them on the water stone with just a few quick passes, and I've got extremely sharp tools. They were sharp before, but the darn things just scare me now.
I was considering the Tormek system, but I'm not going to pay over $500 for a sharpening system, I don't care how good it is. I'll put my tools up against any that were sharpened on the Tormek any day.
What a difference it's made in my turning experience having truly sharp tools again. The grinder also allows me to experiment with different edge shapes that would've taken me a month to grind down before.
You new guys, make sure you have a good sharpening system. I was going to buy the Wolverine system for the grinder, but after seeing Ron in Drums PA's shop built equivalent, I can save myself over $150 by just building my own. I'm going to call it the Karlverine. heh
The Wolverine jig, from what I've heard and read, is a really good system, but I can just build the same stuff myself, and add my own custom fabrication for versatility and CHEAPNESS.
Now that I see the difference between sharp and scary sharp, I'm kicking myself for not buying the grinder right when I first started. The darn thing woulda paid for itself inside a month just in non-kablooied blanks.
The Ryobi grinder has been great so far, and you can get them at Home Depot for $60. Putting the new wheel on was a little touchy, getting it bolted on there without wobble was a little tricky. The grinder also comes with a diamond dressing tool which I've already used and found to do a great job.
Now I can sharpen my lawn mower blades, too! heh [
]
I just went through every lathe tool that I own, grinding and reshaping edges. For the last year, I've been hand-sharpening with a 1000 grit Japanese water stone, which I've gotten pretty good at, but what a gigantic waste of time! By using the flat stone for so long, all of my tools had lost any semblance of a hollow grind, which has really been creating some long sharpening sessions in the last few months.
Now, I grind the edge on the tools with a nice hollow, and then finish them on the water stone with just a few quick passes, and I've got extremely sharp tools. They were sharp before, but the darn things just scare me now.
I was considering the Tormek system, but I'm not going to pay over $500 for a sharpening system, I don't care how good it is. I'll put my tools up against any that were sharpened on the Tormek any day.
What a difference it's made in my turning experience having truly sharp tools again. The grinder also allows me to experiment with different edge shapes that would've taken me a month to grind down before.
You new guys, make sure you have a good sharpening system. I was going to buy the Wolverine system for the grinder, but after seeing Ron in Drums PA's shop built equivalent, I can save myself over $150 by just building my own. I'm going to call it the Karlverine. heh
The Wolverine jig, from what I've heard and read, is a really good system, but I can just build the same stuff myself, and add my own custom fabrication for versatility and CHEAPNESS.
Now that I see the difference between sharp and scary sharp, I'm kicking myself for not buying the grinder right when I first started. The darn thing woulda paid for itself inside a month just in non-kablooied blanks.
The Ryobi grinder has been great so far, and you can get them at Home Depot for $60. Putting the new wheel on was a little touchy, getting it bolted on there without wobble was a little tricky. The grinder also comes with a diamond dressing tool which I've already used and found to do a great job.
Now I can sharpen my lawn mower blades, too! heh [
