Combination Skew Gouge??

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edman2

Local Chapter Leader
Joined
Feb 2, 2007
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1,375
Location
Greenbrier, AR. USA.
Saw a new tool (for me) used by a penturner at Silver Dollar City on Saturday. It is a combination skew and gouge. What is it called? Who sells it? It might be a Crown? Not sure. Checked a couple of vendors pages and couldn't find it. Anyone familiar with this tool?
 
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I dunno... I just watched the video on it. I don't see a big gain for me for it, and it would require some interesting sharpening.

But the again, I don't use a gouge much anymore either!... so it might be good for someone.
 
It looks somewhat similar to a Spindlemaster.
Do a good turn daily!
Don

I agree. It looks like a modified Spindlemaster. I think the Sorby tool is easier to sharpen as you only need to hone the flat face. The Crown tool will need sharpening on the bevel.
:cool::cool::cool:
 
Yes, that is what he called it (now that I've seen it in print). He thought it was the best thing since buttered toast! Thanks Phil.


Stick with buttered toast.

Yes, I have one, it's a "do no harm" tool. Kind of a scraper with no teeth. Works very slowly (well, it did the three times I used it, 6 years ago).
 
Saw a new tool (for me) used by a penturner at Silver Dollar City on Saturday. It is a combination skew and gouge. What is it called? Who sells it? It might be a Crown? Not sure. Checked a couple of vendors pages and couldn't find it. Anyone familiar with this tool?

It might be custom. I went to an AAW regional symposium and Andre Martel demonstrated his technique for turning lamp shades and he used a spindle roughing gouge reground like a skew, and it produced amazing results. Andre used this skew gouge to do the finish cuts on a 20" diameter lamp shade with a wall thickness around 1/16" The finish was like 12000 micromesh
 
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