I thought about mounting this to the drill press but not sure if it will work with the round blanks. Let me know what you think
http://www.harborfreight.com/garage-shop/vises/3-drill-press-vise-68297.html
i'm baffled by the criticality you guys seem to put on being on exact center. being an ex machinist i'm normally way over accurate with my cutting, measuring, centering etc for working with wood and such things. however, unless its something special like Celtic knots, tight size/finish requirements and a few others i can think of, being within .008" or .010" should be plenty close enough for drilling blanks and that is easily achieved with a good drill press. and the set up is so much easier. a good vise with v notch, or as i do a v-block and a clamp. any of those will get clearly centered and straight enough for blanks. and the drill press is designed to "drill". feeds easier, better feed control and many other advantages over a lathe. esides being vertical and not having to fight gravity.
just my $0.02 worth.
i'm baffled by the criticality you guys seem to put on being on exact center. being an ex machinist i'm normally way over accurate with my cutting, measuring, centering etc for working with wood and such things. however, unless its something special like Celtic knots, tight size/finish requirements and a few others i can think of, being within .008" or .010" should be plenty close enough for drilling blanks and that is easily achieved with a good drill press. and the set up is so much easier. a good vise with v notch, or as i do a v-block and a clamp. any of those will get clearly centered and straight enough for blanks. and the drill press is designed to "drill". feeds easier, better feed control and many other advantages over a lathe. esides being vertical and not having to fight gravity.
just my $0.02 worth.
I hear ya. For me, being perfectly centered is just a nice by-product of drilling on the lathe. I don't worry about being perfectly centered, as I don't do any segmented turning (yet).
For me it's just ease--nothing I've seen is easier than chucking it up on the lathe, drilling, and then removing.