Greetings to the Vortex,
I have been thinking of spinning up a mallet to use with my chiseling. I have seen several very nice ones at various wood classes. My question iswhat type of wood will hold/last? I am considering ash.
Thanks
Victor
Greetings to the Vortex,
I have been thinking of spinning up a mallet to use with my chiseling. I have seen several very nice ones at various wood classes. My question iswhat type of wood will hold/last? I am considering ash.
Thanks
Victor
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Victor,
Here is one that I made from Ash. I do not use mine too much it was more for show and practice turning something different.
I have heard Ash is not that great because it could break at the rings (grain). I have not witnessed this so i cannot be sure about it though.
They are fun to make so you could make a few with different species of wood and test them out.
Jim
Beech is a traditional wood for carving/chisel mallets. Not the easiest to find though. We have a lot here in the Northeast since it is not used for lumber and a fungus is killing many of them.
Happy and Safe Turning, Don
Woodturners make the world go ROUND!
I've been using a two piece mallet I made from some 4x4 Poplar 'stickers' for several years. It's soft enough not to leave a lot of marks on stuff, or mess up my drive center (when marking centers on blanks), and just about right for popping the banjo lever on my tailstock to keep it from creeping. The reason it works is that it's built more like a hammer with a big head than your traditional carving mallet. The 'business end' of the face is all end grain so it stand up better than it would if I was pounding with side grain.
I have wished for one a little harder and heavier though...
I made one from Apple for a neighbor. He says it works well. If you want hard go hickory, black locust, honeylocust in that order for the domestics. I used apple for two reasons: 1) it is fairly hard but turns very well, 2) it was the right size piece in my garage
Ridiculum Ergo Sum
Oooohhh... make a Puzzle mallet. I think someone shared how to make one over on the WWA website.
You might find plans for one on this forum if you searched.
our wood shop teacher has one that he made that the handle is from oak the head is made from maple with walnut rings around the head the head is hallow and filled with buck shot the hammer face is covered with leather we use it all the time the lead moving in the head gives that little extra push
14x48 custom 2hp 9gear lathe
9 inch pre 1940 craftsman lathe
36 inch 1914 Sydney bandsaw (BEAST)
Wood in every shelf and nook and cranny,,, seriously too much wood!
http://www.sawmillcreek.org/showthread.php?t=21449
Here's a thread that shows pix on how to do the puzzle mallet joint.
Osage would be another good one, as would hard (sugar) maple. Then there are the exotics like Lignum Vitae. Hammer style would probably last longer than bat/bonker style because you are using the end grain rather than the side grain.
robo hippy
Hello,
I have turned several mallets from old wooden baseball bats. They work very well, and the used bats are cheap!!
Dan Heine
Mine is Osage Orange for the head and some scrap white oak for the handle. (I didn't have a piece of OO that was long enough at the time to do the whole thing in the size I wanted)
--
The most expensive tool is the one you buy "cheaply" and often...
I have a mallet made from Osage Orange and I have used it a LOT. Works great, right weight, and thank you Mr. Cothren for making it for me.
Thanks & Happy Wood Chips,
Dennis -
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I use a mallet quite a bit for carving. The problem with all woods is that eventually the wood delaminates from the pounding. The best wood I've found is lignum vitae. You don't have to make the whole mallet from lignum vitae - you can make just the head of lignum vitae, or you can laminate the lignum vitae to the outside before you turn it (as I did - see pictures below).
Below are a couple of pictures of some of my mallets - I turn them by the dozen because I teach carving and I loan them to my students to use in the class. The first picture shows some of the student mallets, made from whatever scrap I have in the shop. There's oak, maple, walnut, and I don't know what else.
The second picture shows my mallets: from left to right - figured maple, maple with ebony accent, small lignum vitae, large lignum vitae, large oak, and finally bloodwood.
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