JasonM
Member
I got a spur drive to start working on bowls. It's been some time since I turned one, and even then I've only tried a couple of bowls.
Everything I could find for spur drives now has a spring loaded center, which is different than what I had in a bowl class I took, but I got one anyway. The selling point is supposedly that the center retracts so as not to dig too far into and split the piece being turned. What I'm finding instead is that the spring loaded point just wants to push the piece off of the spurs.
Trying to position the spur drive with a mallet prior to putting it on the lathe is no go - the spring just makes the drive pop off. I can position it on the lathe first and then tighten the piece down further, but it always feels like the spurs' bite is pretty superficial and over the course of turning will ultimately have more of a shallow boring effect rather than biting and driving.
I figure these things cannot be this flawed in their basic concept, so I must be misusing it. Any advice or help is appreciated.
Thanks!
Everything I could find for spur drives now has a spring loaded center, which is different than what I had in a bowl class I took, but I got one anyway. The selling point is supposedly that the center retracts so as not to dig too far into and split the piece being turned. What I'm finding instead is that the spring loaded point just wants to push the piece off of the spurs.
Trying to position the spur drive with a mallet prior to putting it on the lathe is no go - the spring just makes the drive pop off. I can position it on the lathe first and then tighten the piece down further, but it always feels like the spurs' bite is pretty superficial and over the course of turning will ultimately have more of a shallow boring effect rather than biting and driving.
I figure these things cannot be this flawed in their basic concept, so I must be misusing it. Any advice or help is appreciated.
Thanks!