MisterDrow Posted December 2, 2017 Report Share Posted December 2, 2017 My wife found this 14”x41” capacity lathe with a custom welded stand on Facebook and bought it for me as an early Christmas present. I’ve already found an adapter to upgrade the chuck and need to replace the switch but other than that it works very well. Any tips for a new turner? What should I look for in a chuck and in turning chisels? 2 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
mat60 Posted December 2, 2017 Report Share Posted December 2, 2017 Sorry no help but congrats. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Chet Posted December 2, 2017 Report Share Posted December 2, 2017 Nicer looking find. Enjoy! Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Popular Post Mark J Posted December 2, 2017 Popular Post Report Share Posted December 2, 2017 Don't know a thing about the lathe your awesome wife got you, but it looks to be in good condition. A couple of questions. Do you have some wood turning experience? Or are you ('scuse the pun) a green turner? Do you have any accseories beyond what you show? What types of turnings would you like to make? If new to wood turning I have give you this stern warning: wood turning is highly addictive. If you are new to this fun I recommend looking in your area for a class: community college, art center, local turning club. A little instruction (and safety discussion) can get you off to a good start. Opinions vary on this, but if you are starting out I recommend starting with carbide scraping tools rather than HSS cutting tools. 3 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Popular Post Marmotjr Posted December 2, 2017 Popular Post Report Share Posted December 2, 2017 A book all turners should have: "Woodturning: A foundation course" By Keith Rowley. Comes with a DVD too. Pretty heavy on the basics and safety, but fundamentals are where you need to start! Without investing in a sharpening system, which can run a few hundy, Get yourself a (one) carbide tool to start. I'd recommend a round cutter head to start. Make this your very first tool. It doesn't rough very well, It doesn't finish that well, and it doesn't do detail work that well, but it CAN do all of them (I do seem to prefer it for inside bowls, almost hollowing if I'm not using my bowl gouge). If I had to have just one tool to start, it would be a round carbide. It's my "I'm not sure what tool to use here" tool. Other tools will quickly follow once you get hooked. If you can get a handle that comes with a variety of carbide tips, that's all the better. Then you can have your rougher and detail too. This one tool will get you started that day, and you can be producing nice pieces within a day or so. Some turners will never touch a "classic" style turning tool, they'll stick to carbides all the way. But if you want to get into the gouges and chisels, and I highly recommend you do, then pick up a generic set of tools that have all the basics covered. Eventually you'll want to upgrade some of the tools to a much higher quality, but some of them you can keep el'cheapo for ever and they'll do fine. I recently bought a Sorby Skew chisel, Bowl gouge, and spindle gouge, but I'm using ground down files with pine dowels stuck on the end for some detail shapes I like to carve. Don't get me wrong, I plan on upgrading the pine to quilted maple, but if it works..... But with tools comes sharpening. You know that. But now instead of flat plane blades, we have skewed 2 sided bevels, diamond bevels, radiused gouges, radius fingernail gouges, etc. Keith's book does a good job of teach how to sharpen, and there's a lot of good videos out there on the basics too. Mike Waldt has some great technique videos, so does Brian Havens. Carl Jacobsen, Cap'n Eddie, Frank Howarth, Martin Saban-Smith, Kyle Toth, Peter Brown, and Stephen Ogle are all turners I have been inspired by. I'd recommend having a look at all their libraries and I guarantee you'll watch at least a few from each. Back to sharpening. You'll need a slow speed grinder, they are available for about $100. Keith's book has plans for some jigs you can build to help hold the tools. There are also commercially available grinder stand and such that come with all the do hickeys needed. I have a thread around here for a shop built wolverine style fingernail jig, either 3d printed or shop built. But as I said, the monetary investment for sharpening can cost as much or more than the lathe itself. As for accessories, you need to determine what the Morse taper of your lathe is. Given it's size, I'd assume it's a Morse taper 2. You can find specs listed online to compare the parts you already have. Once you know the MT, you can order parts with the knowledge they'll fit 99% of the time. The only issues I've heard of is a male MT2 being deeper than the female end receiving it, but again, given the size of your lathe, you shouldn't encounter this. You'll want a (small) collection of drive centers and live centers. It looks like you already have a cupped live center in the tailstock. That's one of the things I'd like to have eventually, as it adds stability to larger spindles. But there will be occasions where a cup is too big. You'll want a 60* live center for this. It's basically the same thing, but without the cup, so the only contact is a single point, allowing for more work nearer that axis of rotation. (While I'm thinking of it, a tennis ball makes a great jam chuck with that cup center). EDIT: As for drive centers, I'm going to assume you have some sort of spur drive. It's a solid piece with pokey ends on it that sticks in the drive shaft. It's a solid place to start, but you'll eventually find you have to keep cranking down on the tail stock to get it to bit properly as the piece gets worked. Then you'll want to invest in some crown drives. Similar in design, but the center point is spring loaded, so the tines of the crown will always be digging in, driving the piece. They come in a variety of sizes, and unless you are doing a bunch of big or tiny stuff, a medium sized crown will be a good place to start. /edit I'm not so sure about that rack in some aspects, as I know I would have stuff lost in the back of it fairly quickly. But that's a personal thing. One thing I would make right of the bat for it is a tool rack that lays on that top shelf. The tool handles would protrude slightly from the end so you can easily grab and replace tools as necessary. Make it modular/expandable, trust me. I thought my 10 tool rack I made would be sufficient, nope. Find out the thread size of the spindle. There are a variety of sizes out there, and I'd bet yours is one of the wonky ones, but no biggy if it is. Nova makes a variety of adapters for spindles. If you can't figure it out on your own, go to the hardware store, and pick up a 1"x8 tpi and 1.25" x8 tpi nut. Those are the two most common (YMMV) sizes out there. Once you've determined the size and the thread count, you can return the nuts, and order your chuck. As for chucks, I know other's will have their recommendations, because that's what they've bought. So for mine, it's the Nova system. Plenty of adapters if necessary, and a very large selection of jaws. Whatever you buy, don't skimp. The chuck is a reference surface. If it's wonky, so will be the piece. But I recommend trying to learn to turn without a chuck first. 1, You'll learn how to do things the hard way, and that can come in very handy later as you have to mount a piece that just doesn't want to be mounted. Lots of videos and such on chuckless bowls out there. But wait till you are ready to turn a piece that requires a chuck before buying it. Saves some money in the short term and you figure out if you really want to turn. Another thing I find very useful is a Jacobs chuck. This way you can mount drill bits in the tail stock and bore out waste before touching a tool. You can also tear a jacobs chuck from an old drill if you have one laying around, and use that. One of the magical things about hand holding a drill bit is you will find it almost always self centers and aligns. EDIT2: You'll also want to setup some sort of Dust collection for it. We had a recent thread which turned out be pretty comprehensive on the viability of a variety of commercial and shop built solutions: https://www.woodtalkonline.com/topic/25732-lathe-dust-collection-idea/ 2 1 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Marmotjr Posted December 2, 2017 Report Share Posted December 2, 2017 10 minutes ago, Mark J said: If new to wood turning I have give you this stern warning: wood turning is highly addictive. Corrected To: expensive. It's a rabbit hole of fun and misery. 1 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
thatCharlieDude Posted December 2, 2017 Report Share Posted December 2, 2017 Congrats! what Marmotjr said lol I will add check out this dude, Nick does some really fun stuff with epoxy http://www.nzwoodturning.co.uk/ 1 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Gixxerjoe04 Posted December 3, 2017 Report Share Posted December 3, 2017 Where do you control the speed? For chucks, I'd probably got with a nova G3, should be good enough for what sizes piece would be done on that lathe I'd say. Are you gonna use traditional tools or carbide? Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
thatCharlieDude Posted December 3, 2017 Report Share Posted December 3, 2017 7 minutes ago, Gixxerjoe04 said: Where do you control the speed? For chucks, I'd probably got with a nova G3, should be good enough for what sizes piece would be done on that lathe I'd say. Are you gonna use traditional tools or carbide? It's a Reeves drive so there should be a couple of panels he can remove to get to the pulleys. That's how he'll control the rpms. @Drow you can google the make and model it get the user manual. It should have a pulley diagram in it. Nova G3 is good choice. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Marmotjr Posted December 3, 2017 Report Share Posted December 3, 2017 2 hours ago, thatCharlieDude said: It's a Reeves drive so there should be a couple of panels he can remove to get to the pulleys. That's how he'll control the rpms. @Drow you can google the make and model it get the user manual. It should have a pulley diagram in it. Reeves drives usually only have one pulley on each side, speed is controlled by a lever that changes the opening of a variable pulley. The squeezing of the pulley forces the belt farther in or out, changing the ratios, and the speed. I see neither a knob nor a lever, so it's probably just a simple pulley drive (dunno the fancy name). So yeah, you'll have to crack the hood every time you want to change speeds. It'll make you plan your turnings a bit more, doing your work flow so you make the fewest speed changes possible. But it's not a bad way to learn, but I recommend NOT trying a reeves or variable speed lathe until you can afford one :). Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
thatCharlieDude Posted December 3, 2017 Report Share Posted December 3, 2017 13 hours ago, Marmotjr said: Reeves drives usually only have one pulley on each side, speed is controlled by a lever that changes the opening of a variable pulley. Interesting. Thanks for the info. I had a dude tell me my lathe had a reeves drive it (Excelsior mini lathe) but according to your explanation it doesn't. It has two sets of pulleys; one set on top and one below and I have to crack the box open to adjust the speed. I tend to set the rpms at the fast speed the rough blank can safely handle and take light cuts. As the blank gets smaller and more round I'll up the speed if I need to but I rarely do. With that said I mounted a tankard blank yesterday and I thought the whole thing was going to fly out the door it was vibrating so much. I forgot to check the pulleys and my son had changed them to turn some spindles. I nearly crapped my pants. Last time I do that. 1 1 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Marmotjr Posted December 4, 2017 Report Share Posted December 4, 2017 Oh, and as long as that sander is square and effective, you're a good chunk of the way towards pen turning. Squaring your blanks with the tube in them is one of the bigger PITA's for pens. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Popular Post lewisc Posted December 4, 2017 Popular Post Report Share Posted December 4, 2017 Nice lathe. I don’t do enough of it but using the lathe is one of my favourite things. Get yourself some sort of extraction behind it. It won’t get the big chips but most of the finer stuff will get sucked away. A couple of good projects are mallets. Easy to turn and very functional when working. Here’s a carvers mallet and wedged mallet I made a few years ago. A big fat rolling pin is also a good one to do. 3 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Jfitz Posted December 4, 2017 Report Share Posted December 4, 2017 Check out this port, which was a reply to my "I got a lathe" post.... 2 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
MisterDrow Posted December 4, 2017 Author Report Share Posted December 4, 2017 On 12/2/2017 at 4:24 PM, Mark J said: A couple of questions. Do you have some wood turning experience? Or are you ('scuse the pun) a green turner? Do you have any accseories beyond what you show? What types of turnings would you like to make? [...] Opinions vary on this, but if you are starting out I recommend starting with carbide scraping tools rather than HSS cutting tools. I have zero experience so this is all brand new to me. The lathe came with a set of turning chisels from Harbor Freight that are all very dull but otherwise well cared for. I've sharpened a couple of them and they seem to cut relatively well but they don't leave the cleanest surface on the piece--unsure if that's the tools or my lack of experience. I'll be getting some better tools soon. I priced out the carbide tools and damn... I may snag myself a roughing tool but the rest are going to have to wait. On 12/2/2017 at 4:35 PM, Marmotjr said: Corrected To: expensive. It's a rabbit hole of fun and misery. Isn't this the mantra of all woodworking? Also, thank you for the insanely long and incredibly informative response. On 12/2/2017 at 6:49 PM, Gixxerjoe04 said: Where do you control the speed? For chucks, I'd probably got with a nova G3, should be good enough for what sizes piece would be done on that lathe I'd say. Are you gonna use traditional tools or carbide? It's got a panel that opens with two pulleys that I can adjust the belt on, similar to my drill press. I need to learn more about what speeds to use for what purpose. Also, I've read enough horror stories about things going wrong that I am going to get myself a face shield, as well. 1 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Marmotjr Posted December 4, 2017 Report Share Posted December 4, 2017 4 hours ago, MisterDrow said: I priced out the carbide tools and damn... I may snag myself a roughing tool but the rest are going to have to wait. I got this carbide chisel with the lathe package I bought initially. It's served me well, but it's not top of the line. I would not turn it down if offered again, but I'd also try my hands on other ones first too. It's at a fair price for 4 bits, and the obvious problem of the bit rolling int he shaft really doesn't occur if you tighten it properly. https://www.pennstateind.com/store/LXMSET.html 4 hours ago, MisterDrow said: Also, thank you for the insanely long and incredibly informative response. You're welcome! 4 hours ago, MisterDrow said: I need to learn more about what speeds to use for what purpose. We had another semi recent thread on speeds, had some good info in it. But basically, the larger and/or more unbalanced the piece is, the slower you need to go. Also dull tools will require slower speeds and lighter cuts. 4 hours ago, MisterDrow said: I've sharpened a couple of them and they seem to cut relatively well but they don't leave the cleanest surface on the piece--unsure if that's the tools or my lack of experience. When my Skew chisel is sharp, I can get a finish ready surface with it. Most of my other tools require a touch of final shaping with 60/80 grit, but that's a lack of skill, not the tools. And prepare to curse the heck out of end grain. 1 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
thatCharlieDude Posted December 5, 2017 Report Share Posted December 5, 2017 8 hours ago, MisterDrow said: I have zero experience so this is all brand new to me. The lathe came with a set of turning chisels from Harbor Freight that are all very dull but otherwise well cared for. I've sharpened a couple of them and they seem to cut relatively well but they don't leave the cleanest surface on the piece--unsure if that's the tools or my lack of experience. I'll be getting some better tools soon. I priced out the carbide tools and damn... I may snag myself a roughing tool but the rest are going to have to wait. Isn't this the mantra of all woodworking? Also, thank you for the insanely long and incredibly informative response. It's got a panel that opens with two pulleys that I can adjust the belt on, similar to my drill press. I need to learn more about what speeds to use for what purpose. Also, I've read enough horror stories about things going wrong that I am going to get myself a face shield, as well. The Harbor Feights aren't bad, I think the steel is a little soft and the handles are too short. But with those tools you can make your own chisels. There are lots of tangs on eBay (and other places). You can get a carbide or traditional chisel pretty affordable and turn your own handle. You should be able to make your own tool for around 50 bucks. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Marmotjr Posted December 5, 2017 Report Share Posted December 5, 2017 21 hours ago, thatCharlieDude said: You should be able to make your own tool for around 50 bucks. Or far far less. If you want a very specific type of cut or tool, you can grind your own from old files. There's a place near me that sells scrap/old bolts and files and such for like $3 a pound. They won't be for continous use, but for those "I wish I had a... " moments. I have a wide flat file that I have ground into a scraper. I don't do a lot of scraping, I'd rather use my carbide, but If I want the larger radius for some reason, there I go. I also have a narrow file that I have ground a forked "serpent's tongue" detail gouge. I use it for making equally spaced circles. After the first two are cut, the first fork rests in the second groove to cut the third, and so on. All of these were free to me, and I turned my own handles for them. 2 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
SirNot Posted December 6, 2017 Report Share Posted December 6, 2017 So about a year ago, my co-worker found out I was into woodworking and he had just bought a mini lathe to try out pen turning, but had no place to store it. So I let him keep it at my place. And that's how I got hooked. I have a Jet 1410 mini lathe. I outfitted it with a Barracuda 2 Chuck and bought a Nova Drill Chuck for the tailstock (makes drilling out pen blanks so much easier, especially since my drill press only has a 2.5 inch stroke- I hate that thing...). For pen turning, I use an adjustable pen mandrel with a mandrel saver in the tail. My go to tools are my mini-carbides my 1/2 inch skew and my roughing gouge (the traditional tools are older Craftsman tools). I did finally break down and get a pen press and it has already proven to be worth its price. What I like about pen turning is that once you have the setup (mandrel, drill bits, barrel trimmer, pen press), each project is relatively inexpensive. Most kits run $2-8 (there are many more expensive kits, but my most popular and profitable are the Euro style) and blanks run $1-5 each. I am easily able to sell my pens for $30-$100. At this point, all of my investment has been recouped and I have 10 more pens that I am making for people for Christmas gifts. Add to that the fact that I can start and finish a project in about an hour rather than waiting hours between glue-ups and I am a happy pen turner. My next project to turn is a wooden mug. After the holidays... Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Tom King Posted December 6, 2017 Report Share Posted December 6, 2017 A guy here on the lake invited me over to use his Robust lathe. I wish he hadn't done that, but I'm glad he did! Not worth the cost of admission to me, for no more turning than I do, but I still want one. 2 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Mark J Posted December 6, 2017 Report Share Posted December 6, 2017 1 hour ago, Tom King said: A guy here on the lake invited me over to use his Robust lathe. I wish he hadn't done that, but I'm glad he did! Not worth the cost of admission to me, for no more turning than I do, but I still want one. I've said it before. It's remarkably addictive. 1 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
SirNot Posted December 6, 2017 Report Share Posted December 6, 2017 1 hour ago, Mark J said: I've said it before. It's remarkably addictive. Unbelievably so. I never had an interest, even when my friend brought his lathe over. But the first time I touched a tool to that spinning piece of wood... 1 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Tom King Posted December 7, 2017 Report Share Posted December 7, 2017 2 hours ago, Mark J said: I've said it before. It's remarkably addictive. I already do some turning, with my old Delta, but that Robust lathe raises the pleasure to a new level. It's on the level of making the jump in bandsaws from a 14" to a 24". You don't realize the difference the tool can make, but it's a big one once you use it yourself. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Popular Post MisterDrow Posted December 7, 2017 Author Popular Post Report Share Posted December 7, 2017 17 hours ago, SirNot said: Unbelievably so. I never had an interest, even when my friend brought his lathe over. But the first time I touched a tool to that spinning piece of wood... I can't even really make anything well with it yet but the feeling of just making a squared blank into a rounded, roughly spindle-shaped thing was unreal. It feels incredibly silly to say that out loud (or type it out) but it's true. 3 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
SirNot Posted December 7, 2017 Report Share Posted December 7, 2017 Just now, MisterDrow said: I can't even really make anything well with it yet but the feeling of just making a squared blank into a rounded, roughly spindle-shaped thing was unreal. It feels incredibly silly to say that out loud (or type it out) but it's true. The first thing I made was a wand for my kid, who is a huge Potter fan. He chose walnut for me to make it out of (my local lumber yard sells "Wand Blanks"- I think it cost $4). To this day, I hate that wand, but it was satisfying to do. He loves it. I've offered to make him a new one, now that I have a bit of skill and better tools, but he won't let me. Even the one I made for my daughter a few weeks later looks better, but he just doesn't see what I do. He won't give it up. He doesn't know it yet, but for Christmas, he's getting a new wand... 2 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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