sbwertz
Member
After six years, I am finally becoming more confident using the skew on something larger than a pen blank! For years I've been living in terror of the dreaded spiral catch....with good reason.
For the first three years I turned, I used it only for v grooves for beads and squaring the ends of pieces. Then I started using it flat on the rest like a scraper. But I avoided using it like a SKEW. Part of that was because the only skew I had was the half inch one that came with my original Crown basic turning set. It caught REALLY easily.
But I finally decided that I was just going to have to bite the bullet and force myself to become competent with the tool. For the last year, I've used the skew for all my pen turning (except for knocking the corners off the blank) and I am quite comfortable now working on small diameter stock with my oval 1" skew. But I was still really tense using it on something like a peppermill. But I've used it more and more since the first of the year. (It didn't quite give me ulcers...but it came close!) The larger tool made all the difference in the world (thank you to whatever member it was who suggested that I get an oval one!)
So I want to encourage those of you who are new to turning, to grit your teeth and go ahead and use the skew. Get one at least an inch wide, though. They don't catch nearly as easily as the little half inch ones. And I can recommend the oval skew. It works for me. And nothing gives that satin finish that requires almost no sanding like a good, sharp skew.
For the first three years I turned, I used it only for v grooves for beads and squaring the ends of pieces. Then I started using it flat on the rest like a scraper. But I avoided using it like a SKEW. Part of that was because the only skew I had was the half inch one that came with my original Crown basic turning set. It caught REALLY easily.
But I finally decided that I was just going to have to bite the bullet and force myself to become competent with the tool. For the last year, I've used the skew for all my pen turning (except for knocking the corners off the blank) and I am quite comfortable now working on small diameter stock with my oval 1" skew. But I was still really tense using it on something like a peppermill. But I've used it more and more since the first of the year. (It didn't quite give me ulcers...but it came close!) The larger tool made all the difference in the world (thank you to whatever member it was who suggested that I get an oval one!)
So I want to encourage those of you who are new to turning, to grit your teeth and go ahead and use the skew. Get one at least an inch wide, though. They don't catch nearly as easily as the little half inch ones. And I can recommend the oval skew. It works for me. And nothing gives that satin finish that requires almost no sanding like a good, sharp skew.