I've been making pens for over a year now and owe all the successful attempts at pens to help I have received on these forums and from other members. I moved from Phoenix to Tampa thanksgiving of last year and set up my shop and have been turning pens again for about 6 or 7 months. I've just about reached the conclusion that advanced pen making is more of a machinist activity than a woodworking one. I sell far more non-wood pens than I do wood pens except for some I make to look like cigars. For that I use wood to mimic the look of tobacco. Oh well enough about me.
I would like to be able to make kitless pens without tubes and thread my own barrels. The only success I've had with tap and die is simply tapping the hole when I make bottle stoppers.
I use a Jet 1014 vs mini lathe and it is a great tool. However, I'm looking to ugrade some items in my shop and was thinking about getting a metal lathe. I would like to keep the cost under $2,000 for the lathe and tools and such. I've been searching the internet and think something like:
http://www.grizzly.com/products/Combo-Lathe-Mill/G4015Z
would be a good tool. Not sure what the milling attachment does, but if it can help me make inlays and such I guess it would be a good addition to the lathe (if it works).
the thing I really like about the Jet lathe is that it worked perfect right out of the box. I really don't want to buy a lathe, like from harbor frieght and have to do a lot of twiking to make it work.
So my questions are:
1. Would the Grizzly lathe i linked fit the bill for me or is there another lathe I haven't discovered that would work better.
2. Am I wrong about the machinist aspect to advanced pen turning?
3. Since I started making pens I have wanted to make a four point pool cue pen, more of a mini pool cue with a pen in it than a pen that looks like a pool cue. Would the milling attachment to the lathe help with that or do I need some other type of tool.
4. Would I be better off just adding a good milling machine or router or something instead of the metal lathe.
I currently drill and square blanks on the lathe and have a byrnes tablesaw and a byrnes disk sander and an old bandsaw I use for cutting some oversized stock.
I would appreciate any feedback anyone can give me on which direction I might go.
Thanks for all your help.
I would like to be able to make kitless pens without tubes and thread my own barrels. The only success I've had with tap and die is simply tapping the hole when I make bottle stoppers.
I use a Jet 1014 vs mini lathe and it is a great tool. However, I'm looking to ugrade some items in my shop and was thinking about getting a metal lathe. I would like to keep the cost under $2,000 for the lathe and tools and such. I've been searching the internet and think something like:
http://www.grizzly.com/products/Combo-Lathe-Mill/G4015Z
would be a good tool. Not sure what the milling attachment does, but if it can help me make inlays and such I guess it would be a good addition to the lathe (if it works).
the thing I really like about the Jet lathe is that it worked perfect right out of the box. I really don't want to buy a lathe, like from harbor frieght and have to do a lot of twiking to make it work.
So my questions are:
1. Would the Grizzly lathe i linked fit the bill for me or is there another lathe I haven't discovered that would work better.
2. Am I wrong about the machinist aspect to advanced pen turning?
3. Since I started making pens I have wanted to make a four point pool cue pen, more of a mini pool cue with a pen in it than a pen that looks like a pool cue. Would the milling attachment to the lathe help with that or do I need some other type of tool.
4. Would I be better off just adding a good milling machine or router or something instead of the metal lathe.
I currently drill and square blanks on the lathe and have a byrnes tablesaw and a byrnes disk sander and an old bandsaw I use for cutting some oversized stock.
I would appreciate any feedback anyone can give me on which direction I might go.
Thanks for all your help.