mbellek
Member
So my very favorite wood to turn is Dymondwood. I know a lot of people don't like it, and don't get me wrong, I like a lot of natural woods too, but for what I make (which is not pens) it really makes the biggest impression and it holds a lot of the small detail better than other woods.
The only bad part is that when I want to turn a d-wood blank, I spend almost as much time getting it on the lathe as I do turning it!! At first I tried to hammer in the spur center like I do with so many other woods... I quickly learned that was a mistake! Then the place where I got my d-wood (wood n whimsies) said to use a 4-jaw.
That made sense and off to woodcraft I went, planning to buy one... Until I saw, what?
THE PRICETAG! Right! It was like $200 and was also the cheapest they had!!
So I bought a drill chuck instead. I still spend an awful lot of time getting the blank on there, because I have to mark center, then mark a circle, then cut it down with a Dremel attachment that I found which does a better job than anything else I can think of. Oh, sure the tool jumps out from where I'm cutting a lot and my fingers are all beat up because of it, but so far its all I can manage. So when I cut it down with the dremel I have a little 1/4-1/2" long "thing" sticking out, which goes in the drill chuck.
So I'm asking for suggestions.
Is there a better way to get my dymondwood blanks on the lathe with a drill chuck? I was thinking maybe I could somehow make a stencil of where the teeth lie and just carve that part out of my blank, but I don't know how.
I would just do my above method and use a belt sander, but I don't have one and I'm not sure I can afford a big investment like that right now.
Any ideas?
Sorry if this doesn't make sense. I'm very new and I don't know a lot of technical talk yet.
Thanks
Melanie
The only bad part is that when I want to turn a d-wood blank, I spend almost as much time getting it on the lathe as I do turning it!! At first I tried to hammer in the spur center like I do with so many other woods... I quickly learned that was a mistake! Then the place where I got my d-wood (wood n whimsies) said to use a 4-jaw.
That made sense and off to woodcraft I went, planning to buy one... Until I saw, what?
THE PRICETAG! Right! It was like $200 and was also the cheapest they had!!
So I bought a drill chuck instead. I still spend an awful lot of time getting the blank on there, because I have to mark center, then mark a circle, then cut it down with a Dremel attachment that I found which does a better job than anything else I can think of. Oh, sure the tool jumps out from where I'm cutting a lot and my fingers are all beat up because of it, but so far its all I can manage. So when I cut it down with the dremel I have a little 1/4-1/2" long "thing" sticking out, which goes in the drill chuck.
So I'm asking for suggestions.
Is there a better way to get my dymondwood blanks on the lathe with a drill chuck? I was thinking maybe I could somehow make a stencil of where the teeth lie and just carve that part out of my blank, but I don't know how.
I would just do my above method and use a belt sander, but I don't have one and I'm not sure I can afford a big investment like that right now.
Any ideas?
Sorry if this doesn't make sense. I'm very new and I don't know a lot of technical talk yet.
Thanks
Melanie