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pete ryalls
08-25-2009, 5:59 PM
saw this http://www.bowlsaw.com/index.html

alex carey
08-25-2009, 7:50 PM
thats pretty sweet, it seems you still loose a little more wood but its still cool.

curtis rosche
08-25-2009, 8:56 PM
looks great. but i wonder what happens when you get a catch? break your wrists, or the tool

Scott Conners
08-25-2009, 8:58 PM
My first thought when that was originally posted was "how do you get a round bottom?" Then I started looking at the site, and realized that you don't - you need to make relatively straight sided and flat bottomed bowls. The makes it a pass for me.

curtis rosche
08-25-2009, 9:13 PM
Scott. you would cut the center out, then finish your bowl as normal. then you could use the cored peice to make a box. remember you have a lathe, your only restriction is size, not shape

ROY DICK
08-25-2009, 9:56 PM
Kinda like fishin' lures, most are made to catch the fisherman.

Roy

Kyle Iwamoto
08-26-2009, 2:40 AM
Seems like a "sharp" :D idea to me. I can't spring (actually, I won't) for a real corer, since I only have a mini. May be worth the chance. He does offer a free trial. Looks hard to make that BIG space for the bowl saw. Chopping end grain is hard to do. But then saving a bowl or 2 will pay for it pretty fast. But that bowl will be pretty small, so you'd have to save a few to pay for it.

And you can make that flat bottom round....

Jeremy Williams
08-26-2009, 8:25 AM
looks great. but i wonder what happens when you get a catch? break your wrists, or the tool

:eek: I don't think you use the tool with the lathe on! :rolleyes:

curtis rosche
08-26-2009, 9:53 AM
Jeremy, you didnt go to the whole site did you? there is a video explaining how to use it. you twist the handle while the lathe turns the wood

Ron McKinley
08-26-2009, 11:39 AM
I've used it several times and it works as advertised. There's no danger of a catch. You turn the bowl blank by hand until the saw cuts a groove or kerf, then turn the lathe on slow and hold on while the saw cuts out the smaller bowl. Watch the video and you'll see how easy it is to use.

The inventor designed it to keep from wasting most of an expensive block of exotic wood or a highly figured piece of domestic wood. The small bowl you cut out of the center limits the shape of that piece but not the larger piece. Give it a try. You might like it......Ron

curtis rosche
08-26-2009, 11:41 AM
how long does the saw stay sharp?

Paul Douglass
01-05-2010, 10:57 AM
Any more tried this bowlsaw? The main reason I don't turn many bowls is I hate making lathe shavings out of beautiful wood. On the other hand I I can't afford the expensive options.

ROY DICK
01-05-2010, 11:27 AM
I've seen some that use a parting tool, but I've never tried it.

Roy

Reed Gray
01-05-2010, 11:53 AM
Kyle,
McNaughton/Kelton tools makes a coring system that is designed for the mini lathe. As far as being able to afford one, if you sell your bowls, it will pay for itself in very short order. There is a time savings as well as a wood savings. The time savings come from the core already having the bottom/outside shaped, and all you have to do is to flatten the bottom, make a tenon or recess, and make one or 2 clean up passes, and the bowl is ready to reverse. It is a huge savings with bigger bowls, and a small savings with smaller bowls. If you have really nice wood, it is worth it.

robo hippy

Kyle Iwamoto
01-05-2010, 3:12 PM
Funny that this thread popped up again. I just got my micro McNaughton set yesterday. I could not pass up a 15% off 1 day sale from Craft Supplies. I ran into some semi valuable wood, and figured it's about time to get a small coring set. Have not tried it yet, I may try it out today or tomorrow. Even free semi valuable wood needs to be saved. I turned 3 bowls, and kept thinking, man, if I had a corer, I could have at least 6 bowls.....

gary butcher
01-05-2010, 4:06 PM
looks pretty handy, not too spendy and you get to try before you buy. Can't really argue with that policy.