I do have a decent bandsaw - the Grizzly 513X2. But no lathe. I'l probably ask my lathing friend to help me. He has offered before - not to do the lathing but to instruct me on his equipment.
Brian
I do have a decent bandsaw - the Grizzly 513X2. But no lathe. I'l probably ask my lathing friend to help me. He has offered before - not to do the lathing but to instruct me on his equipment.
Brian
Veni Vidi Vendi Vente! I came, I saw, I bought a large coffee!
Cody
Logmaster LM-1 sawmill, 30 hp Kioti tractor w/ FEL, Stihl 290 chainsaw, 300 bf cap. Solar Kiln
What do you guys use to control the dust with a Kutzall? I used one recently to shape the crest rail of a chair and it made a heck of a mess. I've been noodling over ways to cut down on the dust.
A down draft table would be tough to use as you have to securely clamp the wood down.
At this point, I'm leaning towards doing it outside with a fan off to the side to blow most of the dust away. Problem is that all this does is move the mess from my shop out to the front yard.
Any ideas?
Regards,
John
I'm planning to do it outside. I believe the seat has enough mass, but if it requires clamping, I'll secure it to some portable saw horses that I have. No WAY would I do this inside.
You can use the Kutzall indoors and it is a dust storm. I set up a temp booth using a shower curtain hung around part of my workbench. The kutzall works well but you need to practice some before as it can get aggressive but I find it can be controlled. The front legs on the chairs I make are not turned but shaped first on the bandsaw and then with micro planes, files and a lot of sanding. All done after cutting and prefitting the joint. It adds alot of hours but I like the free formed and sculptured look instead of turned.
Tim-
I like your legs a lot
Do you have any pix of them in their rougher form?
My Charles Brock plans came today. Looks like a lot of shop entertainment for 2010.
I'm saving for the wood. Still planning on a combination of straight grain and curly maple. But I saw some photos of a curly cherry rocker. That looks magnificent too. 8/4 cherry is about $6.25 at Reel Lumber (local) and some of their pieces show some figure.
Veni Vidi Vendi Vente! I came, I saw, I bought a large coffee!
Brian, are the plans for a high back rocker with heavily shaped arms, seat and back, similiar to the one Sam is sitting in on the cover of the October FWW?
My wife has offered to buy me the Maloof rocker class William Ng is giving in July of next year. I've seen Williams chairs and they are awesome. Very large, heavily countoured and he's made some changes to Sam's design that I like.
I'm not sold on the idea yet and would consider plans.
Regards,
John
Yes, John, it looks quite a bit like the October Fine Woodworking cover. There is a photo on Charles Brock's July Blog.
Veni Vidi Vendi Vente! I came, I saw, I bought a large coffee!
Shawn and Brian, I am looking forward to your progress and wood selection. I am probably going to go with walnut but am still deciding.
Ben
I believe that might be a type-o. He's told me that the extra coarse is the way to go. I have my seat blank glued up. My wheel came today in the mail. I'm gonna make some dust after work tomorrow. Will post pix if it looks good.