Saw the new Lathe 101 NYW show yesterday (our local
PBS station shows an "earlier" copy of it on Wednesday.
While I'm not a turner nor do I own a lathe, I would
feel that I would need much more instruction then
what he allows. He gives you a basic introduction
to the elements of a lathe, how to set the tool rest
and what tool you should use when, but really skips
lightly over the choice of RPM, how to sharpen all
the various tools (he only sharpend a gouge) how
to do a bowl, etc. His "practice" project was a
log of about 3 or 4 inches and his first "real"
project was a baseball bat.
He did something, that I didn't expect tho -
he was showing how to do the bat and in his
left hand, he had calipers and in his right, a
tool. While the bat was spinning, he took the
calipers (from behind the bat) and measured how
deep his cut was. He said it was ok to do that.
Is it? I would be curious from those who do turn
as to how this is safe.
MJ Wallace
LRod wrote:
> On 17 Feb 2005 12:56:55 -0800, [email protected] wrote:
>
>
>
>>He did something, that I didn't expect tho -
>>he was showing how to do the bat and in his
>>left hand, he had calipers and in his right, a
>>tool. While the bat was spinning, he took the
>>calipers (from behind the bat) and measured how
>>deep his cut was. He said it was ok to do that.
>>
>>Is it? I would be curious from those who do turn
>>as to how this is safe.
>
>
> Years ago when I first started turning I used to shut off the lathe
> all the time to take a measurement with the calipers, thinking the
> same thing you are. Then I started working out in my mind what
> possible mechanism there is for an accident. I took into account the
> material, its rotation, its size, the tool (caliper), the shape of the
> legs of the caliper, how it contacts the work, and everything else I
> could think of.
>
> I concluded that there isn't anything that I could conceive of that
> would make this a dangerous operation. Years later after having done
> it a lot and seeing others (with more experience in a week than I have
> in ten years) do it, I feel perfectly comfortable with my analysis and
> decision.
>
> If you have an idea of how an accident could occur, please let me know
> so I can revisit the process.
>
Don't worry about it, buddy.
There is NO chance that you will EVER have an accident that way.
ZERO.
ZILCH.
NADA.
[email protected] wrote:
>
> ...
>
> He did something, that I didn't expect tho -
> he was showing how to do the bat and in his
> left hand, he had calipers and in his right, a
> tool. While the bat was spinning, he took the
> calipers (from behind the bat) and measured how
> deep his cut was. He said it was ok to do that.
>
> Is it? I would be curious from those who do turn
> as to how this is safe.
>
It is commonplace for turners to put the calipers to a
spinning workpiece. I've never seen nor had a mishap though
I suppose it is quite possible to catch the calipers on
the piece and have them fly at you. I always wear a face
shield when turning and keep if flipped all the way down
to where it touches my chest so that my throat is protected.
Compared to the damage a skew chisel could do if it gets away
from you, the caliper is not much concern. That said,
you'd have to have a pretty weak grip on a lathe tool to
have it torn from your hand. Typically if you catch the
workpiece, the belt slips instead. Working on large pieces,
especially large bowls at high RPM may be dangerous but
for most of us the worse risk using a lathe is probably
the danger of a tool rolling off the banch and landing on
a foot.
Though he's better than I, Nahrm has never impressed me with
his lathe work. He gets the job done, but an expert turner would
use the skew chisel much more for faster, neater, work.
--
FF
personally I really liked it, Just got a lathe for Christmas, and have been
trying to learn what I can, like the way to hold the chisel, I was holding
it un an underhand manner until I saw him working, and the part on how to
make the same peace multiple times was good to
but then again I just started with using a lathe
[email protected] wrote:
> Saw the new Lathe 101 NYW show yesterday (our local
> PBS station shows an "earlier" copy of it on Wednesday.
>
> While I'm not a turner nor do I own a lathe, I would
> feel that I would need much more instruction then
> what he allows. He gives you a basic introduction
> to the elements of a lathe, how to set the tool rest
> and what tool you should use when, but really skips
> lightly over the choice of RPM, how to sharpen all
> the various tools (he only sharpend a gouge) how
> to do a bowl, etc. His "practice" project was a
> log of about 3 or 4 inches and his first "real"
> project was a baseball bat.
>
> He did something, that I didn't expect tho -
> he was showing how to do the bat and in his
> left hand, he had calipers and in his right, a
> tool. While the bat was spinning, he took the
> calipers (from behind the bat) and measured how
> deep his cut was. He said it was ok to do that.
>
> Is it? I would be curious from those who do turn
> as to how this is safe.
>
> MJ Wallace
Lou:
> Don't mess with Norm!
>
> Seriously, happy woodworking!
>
> Lou
Recognized that Norm only had about 24 - 25 minutes (all
those "ads" on PBS for the sponsers tend to eat into the
show) to show what he knows about lathes. I agree that
it was an introduction. My only question, not a point, was -
his use of the calipers on spinnng stock. I have seen
him use a table saw without splitters or a guard, joiners
without push blocks, etc. all of these are safety "no,nos" and
wanted to know if he was doing something that wasn't safe.
He says he's self taught. Not a problem with that, many of
us are. But we all don't have a national TV show either. He
has some obligation (no?) to show us safe habits. I would
imagine this technique was cleared by the producer and
Time-Warner - now the owners of the show. There's a
local turner in our area who offers classes and if I can
get the money to go, I'm going to take one of his classes so
I get the ask the question again.
Anyways, I have always been a fan of his and my earliest
rememberances of him was at the National Woodworking Show
in LA about 10 or 12 years ago - he stood in the Delta booth
and there was NO ONE around - he had yet to become the
"beloved" figure he is now - then he was just starting NYW and
was the carpenter on TOH. I wanted to go over and chat and
didn't - sorry I never did. Oh well!
MJ Wallace
Even though I don't own a lathe and never operated one, but having seen
Norm do some turning over the years, I thought the show you mentioned
was a good introduction to the lathe. I am thinking about getting one
if I can convince SWMBO that I need it!
I think that Norm "confessed" that he was no expert and that
he was self-taught. It is like if you went to a neighbor who
was a pretty good woodworker and asked him for some "getting started"
tips on the lathe. Sort of a summary of what he has learned in
the past shows where he has used a lathe.
I respect Norm because he never has a problem with asking
for help from an expert in a field he is not familiar with -
steam bending wood, sharpening chisels, bowl turning pop
immediately into my mind.
One would certainly not expect a complete and thorough lesson in
25 minutes or less (my PBS in Phila had this show last Saturday,
the 12th.)
Don't mess with Norm!
Seriously, happy woodworking!
Lou
As a confirmed "Normite", I can only say thatIn article
<[email protected]>,
<[email protected]> wrote:
> Saw the new Lathe 101 NYW show yesterday (our local
> PBS station shows an "earlier" copy of it on Wednesday.
>
> While I'm not a turner nor do I own a lathe, I would
> feel that I would need much more instruction then
> what he allows. He gives you a basic introduction
> to the elements of a lathe, how to set the tool rest
> and what tool you should use when, but really skips
> lightly over the choice of RPM, how to sharpen all
> the various tools (he only sharpend a gouge) how
> to do a bowl, etc. His "practice" project was a
> log of about 3 or 4 inches and his first "real"
> project was a baseball bat.
>
> He did something, that I didn't expect tho -
> he was showing how to do the bat and in his
> left hand, he had calipers and in his right, a
> tool. While the bat was spinning, he took the
> calipers (from behind the bat) and measured how
> deep his cut was. He said it was ok to do that.
>
> Is it? I would be curious from those who do turn
> as to how this is safe.
>
> MJ Wallace
>
On Sun, 20 Feb 2005 07:20:26 -0600, Unisaw A100 <[email protected]>
wrote:
>Ah yes, the HGTV Fill. First we're going to tell you what
>we're going to do. Then when we get back from commercial
>we'll re-tell you just in case you forgot. Then we'll start
>doing what we told you we were going to do with painstaking
>clarity ("Using a hammer, nails are removed from the
>studs"). Next we'll break for commercial but when we come
>back we'll tell you what we were going to do along with what
>we've done so far...
Actually, that's DIY that does that so horribly. People can talk all
they want about how wonderful David Marks is, but that very
presentation you describe makes the show extremely difficult to
watch...unfortunately, like a horrible accident...you can't turn away.
- -
LRod
Master Woodbutcher and seasoned termite
Shamelessly whoring my website since 1999
http://www.woodbutcher.net
<[email protected]> wrote in message
news:[email protected]...
> Saw the new Lathe 101 NYW show yesterday (our local
> PBS station shows an "earlier" copy of it on Wednesday.
>
> While I'm not a turner nor do I own a lathe, I would
> feel that I would need much more instruction then
> what he allows. He gives you a basic introduction
> to the elements of a lathe, how to set the tool rest
> and what tool you should use when, but really skips
> lightly over the choice of RPM, how to sharpen all
> the various tools (he only sharpend a gouge) how
> to do a bowl, etc. His "practice" project was a
> log of about 3 or 4 inches and his first "real"
> project was a baseball bat.
>
What's left out? Turn fast enough to remove the wood from the piece, and
any faster simply builds danger (square of velocity, remember?).
Keep the tool rest as close to the work as you can, because letting
something spinning that fast have the leverage advantage is likely to
remodel your face with the tool you _were_ holding.
You sharpen the tools the way you sharpen anything else, by removing steel
to reproduce present contour a few microns back.
Bowls are covered in the 225 course.
"Andrew Barss" <[email protected]> wrote in message
news:[email protected]...
> George <george@least> wrote:
>
>
> : What's left out? Turn fast enough to remove the wood from the piece,
and
> : any faster simply builds danger (square of velocity, remember?).
>
>
> I disagree -- the minimal speed to remove wood can easily cause a really
> rough surface. Try turning a spindle or a pen at 200 rpm, then up the
> speed to 2000 rpm. The faster speed gives a much better surface.
>
> -- Andy Barss
OK, if you think you can substitute force for finesse, have at it.
Point is, you don't _have_ to. Speed doesn't remove the wood, the edge
does. Folks who say you need speed for smooth are either working with poor
edges or presentations. Does your plane produce a better surface if you
move it faster? How about your carving gouges?
Sharpen and present properly, and it's merely carving with a moving piece of
work.
"Duane Bozarth" <[email protected]> wrote in message
news:[email protected]...
> "A.M. Wood" wrote:
> >
> > Aren't larger diameter pieces are moving faster than thinner pieces at
> > the same RPM.
>
> Yep, that's the key...it's the surface speed and wood specie and tool
> that are controlling. RPM is the way to get the proper surface speed.
And yet we don't change lathe speed when cutting from rim to bottom, or
bottom to rim on a bowl. Might be a lesson about the need for speed in
there somewhere.
George wrote:
>
> "Duane Bozarth" <[email protected]> wrote in message
> news:[email protected]...
> > "A.M. Wood" wrote:
> > >
> > > Aren't larger diameter pieces are moving faster than thinner pieces at
> > > the same RPM.
> >
> > Yep, that's the key...it's the surface speed and wood specie and tool
> > that are controlling. RPM is the way to get the proper surface speed.
>
> And yet we don't change lathe speed when cutting from rim to bottom, or
> bottom to rim on a bowl. Might be a lesson about the need for speed in
> there somewhere.
Well, sure...I'm talking of the gross speed setting matching the work,
not minute changes...
Although I've watched some w/ variable speed use it almost the way you
describe... :)
"Richard Clements" <[email protected]> wrote in message
news:[email protected]...
> personally I really liked it, Just got a lathe for Christmas, and have
been
> trying to learn what I can, like the way to hold the chisel, I was holding
> it un an underhand manner until I saw him working, and the part on how to
> make the same peace multiple times was good to
>
> but then again I just started with using a lathe
That "underhand" business is something I would never have though of, but
there are folks that do it. Seems counterintuitive to me.
A - Anchor the tool to the rest.
B - Bevel tangent to the rotating work.
C - Cut a curl by moving the handle for entry.
Worked for the kids. I used to tell them to "English" the "C" on bowls.
Unisaw A100 wrote:
> You get the idea. It's sorta like reading Bill Pentz's
> Cyclonic Verses.
>
> UA100, one third the way through Cyclonic Verses and
> thinking maybe the reading of this tome should become a
> reality series where contestants read and the guy/gurl not
> ready to shoot their brains out at the end is the winner...
If you're intent is to provide clear, accurate, complete
technical information - motivated by a desire to save
someone their lungs - it's extremely difficult to ALSO
make it Clancyesque - AND make it all accessible,
FOR FREE. Bill has put in an incredible amount of time
and money to study up on the industry's testing methods,
buy the testing equiptment, set up the tests, run the tests,
gather, record and analyze the data . . . With that data
and the acquired knoweldge of how and why cyclones
do what they do, he's also developed a design that works
better than anything that was available to the hobbyist
- at an affordable price.
BTW - Mother Teresa wasn't any beauty queen by
Vogue standards but I wish there were more people
like her around - if only to serve as an example to
others of what goodness means.
rant mode off
charlie b
[email protected] wrote:
snip
> >
> >Seems that the whole thing could be funneled down into
> >something less than 50 pages. Hell, it would be down to 75
> >if all he did was go back and remove the passages where he
> >mentions CalOSHA.
> a good editor is worth her weight in gold...
Lacking an e-mail address to which I could write you
privately I guess I'll have to do it here (damn spam-bots)
Anyway, I'll be seeing Bill next week. I'm thinking that
if he put his site on a CD perhaps I could, maybe with
suggestions from you and others here, have a go at
editing. I assure you, his motivation is to apply
his technical knowledge and experience to hopefully
save other woodworkers some grief when it comes
to their lungs. He also has many "irons in the fire",
cyclones and dust collection is just one of those
irons. If you've built a web site you know that
they can evolve faster and piece mealed before
the knowledge and skills to organize the structure
and make it easy to maintain. I've got two sites
the second a little easier to update and maintain
than my first. Adobe's GoLive makes things much
easier than the software package I used for
my first site.
So, if you, and/or anyone else in the group have
specific suggestions please e-mail them to me,
my address with this post is my real one (I know,
that gets me on many spam lists - want a "replica"
Rolex? Cialis? A joint venture with an African
banker? ...) Given the number of web pages
on Bill's site, please include the url of the page
then the specifics.
Volunteer constructive critics?
charlie b
Measuring a diameter with the lathe turning is pretty standard. When turning
a spindle to a specific diameter - i.e. a tenon to fit a drilled hole, about
the only way to get it right on is to hold a calipers, or my favorite, an
end wrench on the back side of the piece while taking a light cut with a
parting tool. SOme folks sharpen one side of the end wrench and use it as a
scraper, but I've never treid that.
Ron
"George" <george@least> wrote in message
news:[email protected]...
> And yet we don't change lathe speed when cutting from rim to bottom, or
> bottom to rim on a bowl.
I do but then, my lathe is CNC.
Worse yet is having a bowl gouge catch on you while your roughing up a 50lb
log that is spinning and have the bolts of the headstock shear off, dent the
crap out of the toolrest, just about snap your gouge, have a 50lb object
hearl right past you (best lesson I ever learned was stay of the firing
line) - then have to clean out your pants!
"Andrew Barss" <[email protected]> wrote in message
news:[email protected]...
> [email protected] wrote:
>
> : It is commonplace for turners to put the calipers to a
> : spinning workpiece. I've never seen nor had a mishap though
> : I suppose it is quite possible to catch the calipers on
> : the piece and have them fly at you.
>
> : Compared to the damage a skew chisel could do if it gets away
> : from you, the caliper is not much concern.
>
> True point, although the skew chisel is going to be braced by the
> toolrest (and so a catch is really unlikely to fling it at you), while
> a calipers or wrench held from the back of the workpiece would, IF caught,
> be more likely to come flying.
>
> I think it's unlikely that either a box wrench or a pair of calipers would
> get caught in the first place, since that would require them to be sharp
> enough to dig into the workpiece.
>
> -- Andy Barss
On Mon, 21 Feb 2005 11:30:48 GMT, Unisaw A100 <[email protected]>
wrote:
>charlie b wrote:
>> rant mode off
>
>
>Absolutely no doubt to the word you said charlie b but I'm
>sitting there plodding along and thinking to myself, "man
>there's a whole bunch of repetition here" and then I comes
>upon a passage where Bill states that he'd gone through and
>edited a whole lot of the repetition out and damned if in
>the very next sentence he repeats himself about the
>repetition. ???
>
>Seems that the whole thing could be funneled down into
>something less than 50 pages. Hell, it would be down to 75
>if all he did was go back and remove the passages where he
>mentions CalOSHA.
>
>Your Mileage May Vary/This isn't a dig at the message, just
>wishing it wasn't repeated over and over and over and over
>and over and over and over...
>
>UA100
a good editor is worth her weight in gold...
George <george@least> wrote:
: What's left out? Turn fast enough to remove the wood from the piece, and
: any faster simply builds danger (square of velocity, remember?).
I disagree -- the minimal speed to remove wood can easily cause a really
rough surface. Try turning a spindle or a pen at 200 rpm, then up the
speed to 2000 rpm. The faster speed gives a much better surface.
-- Andy Barss
[email protected] wrote:
: It is commonplace for turners to put the calipers to a
: spinning workpiece. I've never seen nor had a mishap though
: I suppose it is quite possible to catch the calipers on
: the piece and have them fly at you.
: Compared to the damage a skew chisel could do if it gets away
: from you, the caliper is not much concern.
True point, although the skew chisel is going to be braced by the
toolrest (and so a catch is really unlikely to fling it at you), while
a calipers or wrench held from the back of the workpiece would, IF caught,
be more likely to come flying.
I think it's unlikely that either a box wrench or a pair of calipers would
get caught in the first place, since that would require them to be sharp
enough to dig into the workpiece.
-- Andy Barss
Hey, MJ. I remember that. I was there too.
I asked an official how much it cost to get him there and he just said, "A
lot!".
-Doug
==============================
<[email protected]> wrote in message
> Anyways, I have always been a fan of his and my earliest
> rememberances of him was at the National Woodworking Show
> in LA about 10 or 12 years ago - he stood in the Delta booth
> and there was NO ONE around - he had yet to become the
> "beloved" figure he is now - then he was just starting NYW and
> was the carpenter on TOH. I wanted to go over and chat and
> didn't - sorry I never did. Oh well!
>
> MJ Wallace
>
Sort of like The Router Workshop where, when they have to rout the ends of four
boards, and they show *all eight ends* being routed.
-Doug
========================
"John T" <[email protected]> wrote in message
news:[email protected]...
> The reason you see the lack of guards and other safety items on TV and
> mags is usual "to show whats being done better".
> Eh...I can see that in showing a special setup for a magazine, but for
> the actual cut? do you really need to see the actual cutting?
>
> Isn't that kinda like watching paint dry?
>
> John
>
charlie b:
> Volunteer constructive critics?
Start with a print out and a yellow highlighter. Whenever
you see something that's been said before, highlight it.
That's the stuff you want to 86.
Also, you might suggest that Bill take on a PayPal account
and post the link somewhere at the top of the page above the
links to the various articles and add a short blurb about up
keep for the site. This would allow for editing out the
numerous times he mentions how much it has/had cost him.
Don't get me wrong, I think Bill should be made a rich man
considering everyone else gets to benefit but damn!
And last but not least, less is more. Especially with
writing.
UA100
In article <[email protected]>,
John T <[email protected]> wrote:
> The reason you see the lack of guards and other safety items on TV and
> mags is usual "to show whats being done better".
>
Something they used to mention, but either they don't any more, or I
don't hear it
--
--------------------------------------------------------
Personal e-mail is the n7bsn but at amsat.org
This posting address is a spam-trap and seldom read
RV and Camping FAQ can be found at
http://www.ralphandellen.us/rv
bole2cant wrote:
>Sort of like The Router Workshop where, when they have to rout the ends of four
>boards, and they show *all eight ends* being routed.
>-Doug
Ah yes, the HGTV Fill. First we're going to tell you what
we're going to do. Then when we get back from commercial
we'll re-tell you just in case you forgot. Then we'll start
doing what we told you we were going to do with painstaking
clarity ("Using a hammer, nails are removed from the
studs"). Next we'll break for commercial but when we come
back we'll tell you what we were going to do along with what
we've done so far...
You get the idea. It's sorta like reading Bill Pentz's
Cyclonic Verses.
UA100, one third the way through Cyclonic Verses and
thinking maybe the reading of this tome should become a
reality series where contestants read and the guy/gurl not
ready to shoot their brains out at the end is the winner...
On 17 Feb 2005 12:56:55 -0800, [email protected] wrote:
>He did something, that I didn't expect tho -
>he was showing how to do the bat and in his
>left hand, he had calipers and in his right, a
>tool. While the bat was spinning, he took the
>calipers (from behind the bat) and measured how
>deep his cut was. He said it was ok to do that.
>
>Is it? I would be curious from those who do turn
>as to how this is safe.
Years ago when I first started turning I used to shut off the lathe
all the time to take a measurement with the calipers, thinking the
same thing you are. Then I started working out in my mind what
possible mechanism there is for an accident. I took into account the
material, its rotation, its size, the tool (caliper), the shape of the
legs of the caliper, how it contacts the work, and everything else I
could think of.
I concluded that there isn't anything that I could conceive of that
would make this a dangerous operation. Years later after having done
it a lot and seeing others (with more experience in a week than I have
in ten years) do it, I feel perfectly comfortable with my analysis and
decision.
If you have an idea of how an accident could occur, please let me know
so I can revisit the process.
- -
LRod
Master Woodbutcher and seasoned termite
Shamelessly whoring my website since 1999
http://www.woodbutcher.net
In article <[email protected]>,
LRod <[email protected]> wrote:
> If you have an idea of how an accident could occur, please let me know
> so I can revisit the process.
The only mishaps I've had are when my elbow of the caliper-holding arm
drops onto the spinning chuck. If the jaws are outside the diameter of
the chuck it can smart pretty good but I've yet to draw blood this way.
I've not seen the Norm episode yet so the following is offered not
knowing how he did it: To get the most accurate sizing with the caliper
I make sure the legs are placed around the turning and with light
pressure pulled out as I part down to size. If you try to push the
calipers onto the turning you can mis-size the cut.
On a related note, I have certainly caught the straight legged pointed
dividers when sizing mortises or diameters in end grain on numerous
occassions.
--
Owen Lowe and his Fly-by-Night Copper Company
____
"Sure we'll have fascism in America, but it'll come disguised
as 100% Americanism." -- Huey P. Long
charlie b wrote:
> rant mode off
Absolutely no doubt to the word you said charlie b but I'm
sitting there plodding along and thinking to myself, "man
there's a whole bunch of repetition here" and then I comes
upon a passage where Bill states that he'd gone through and
edited a whole lot of the repetition out and damned if in
the very next sentence he repeats himself about the
repetition. ???
Seems that the whole thing could be funneled down into
something less than 50 pages. Hell, it would be down to 75
if all he did was go back and remove the passages where he
mentions CalOSHA.
Your Mileage May Vary/This isn't a dig at the message, just
wishing it wasn't repeated over and over and over and over
and over and over and over...
UA100
I haven't sharpened nary a wrench to use as a scraper but have used many a
wrench (after being cleaned free of grease) as an accurate caliper that will
not change sizes on you. Move it slowly back and forth and it will begin to
burn the high spots. Sand or use the skew to remove high spots. When the
wrench moves from end to end you have a fairly straight dowel to work with.
When making pens I decide what max. diameter I want for the pen, and rough
the blanks down this way.
Lyndell
"Ron Kolakowski" <[email protected]> wrote in message
news:[email protected]...
> Measuring a diameter with the lathe turning is pretty standard. When
turning
> a spindle to a specific diameter - i.e. a tenon to fit a drilled hole,
about
> the only way to get it right on is to hold a calipers, or my favorite, an
> end wrench on the back side of the piece while taking a light cut with a
> parting tool. SOme folks sharpen one side of the end wrench and use it as
a
> scraper, but I've never treid that.
>
> Ron
>
>