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Thread: Has anyone turned an 8' long baseball bat?

  1. #1
    Join Date
    Feb 2013
    Location
    Albuquerque NM
    Posts
    500

    Has anyone turned an 8' long baseball bat?

    I would like to turn a very long bat 6' maybe 8' long has anybody done that and any tricks you can tell me about.
    Do or do not, there is no try.

  2. #2
    I have seen some that were done for keepsakes. Other than that, the common type fish whacker worked. I haven't done any myself, but it would be spindle turning 101. I would have the handle end at the tailstock.

    robo hippy

  3. #3
    Join Date
    Feb 2003
    Location
    Johnson City, TN
    Posts
    665
    I saw once where someone was turning a small sailboat mast maybe 20' or so. They took the tail rest off the lathe and clamped it to a table across the shop and rigged up a freestanding toolrest (like for outboard turning) to turn turn the part that wasn't over the lathe bed. I thought that was pretty smart idea for doing a one time long turning. I'm sure you would have to be fairly careful doing it though. You could probably even rig up a wood section of lathe bed to put the tail rest on.
    Last edited by Sparky Paessler; 03-21-2019 at 10:38 AM.
    Sparky Paessler

  4. #4
    When I was a youngun in the 1960's. My father took me a few times to a wood shop where the old Mennonite or Amish fellow turned baseball bats and wooden porch columns. IIRC his lathe could be about 12 ft long including a wooden bed extension. It was pretty much just an extended piece of whatever wood that would be set up on a sturdy frame that could be fastened to the floor somehow. Many of the porch columns were just narrow, perhaps out of 6 x 6 timbers, but some were quite a bit larger. sort of segmented from long planks and turned to tapering rounds about 12 or 14 inches round at the base. A few were hollow We only stopped there a half dozen times or so. I have seen several old lathes made to be mounted to wooden beds or metal I-beams. It would seem sort of simple to make an extension of get an extra long piece tp use for a temporary extension.

  5. #5
    Join Date
    Jan 2007
    Location
    Ottawa, ON Canada
    Posts
    1,473
    We've actually done a few for promotions in the shop where I work part time. The only tip that I can give you it so use at least one steady and more if you can.
    Grant
    Ottawa ON

  6. #6
    Join Date
    Jan 2015
    Location
    Brentwood, TN
    Posts
    684
    I have turned a set of 4 - 6 foot long bed posts on a 42" long bed (customer built a wooden extension made of Advantech and red oak. It's still on my lathe as a ready to use reference desk. The posts were 5" square red oak laminations, and turned to 4" round cylinders with tapers at each end to 3" x 15" long. No steady rest, and almost all roughing gouge and skew work
    Maker of Fine Kindling, and small metal chips on the floor.
    Embellishments to the Stars - or wannabees.

  7. #7
    Oops! Coffee hadn't kicked in yet, I read it is 8 inches rather than 8 feet....... Doh!!!

    robo hippy

  8. #8
    Join Date
    Sep 2013
    Location
    Wayland, MA
    Posts
    3,668
    Steroid abuse has gone way overboard if we need to start making bats that big!

    One of the advantages of my old Conover lathe is that I can make the bed any length required. That made 6' bedposts easy. A bat should be pretty straightforward because there aren't any real thin spots that will cause wobble as you turn.

    When we lived in St. Louis once or twice a year a trailer from the Hillerich & Bradsby Co. would show up at Busch stadium and demo bat turning by hand. As I recall the guy had a big powermatic lathe and went from blank to finished bat in about 45 seconds using only a skew. It was fun to watch.

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