Generally I like to get the bottom with the tenon about the same thickness as the rim wall or just a little thickerHollowing out a little deeper into the bottom of the bowl so the bottom (with tenon) isn’t so thick
a 2” diameter tenon is a good size for that bowlBuying a new chuck. The one I have now is the nova 50mm 2 inch JS50N. I don’t think it’s big enough for the 8+ inch bowls
Thank you Brian! I remember now wondering how it would turn out with the pith... one other bowl has the pith in it too... one doesn’t though (picture). That one has the same parallel cracks near the tenon (now filled with CA). Does that change your thoughts at all?Think your problem is the pith - You need to cut out the pith (center of log) before cutting bowl blanks - with the pith in the middle (Can see it in middle of your bowl curve) the pith does not shrink as much as the outer heartwood and sapwood , so as the rest of the wood tries to shrink, it will crack to allow for trying to wrap around the pith. So, best thing to do is when cutting your logs rip them down the middle, preferably cutting either side of the pith , then turn your bowls ASAP - you don't want to let them dry before turning , or they will likely crack anyways - turn your rough bowl to a thickness that is about 1/10th of the diameter (somewhere around 1/2 inch for a 5 inch diameter bowl, 1 inch for a 10 inch bowl, etc) and try to keep an EVEN thickness all the way through (and don't forget to count the tenon as part of the thickness, though don't turn bottom too thin either) THEN bag the roughed bowl with shavings and let it dry a while.. a better way to check for dryness of your roughed bowls, weigh them in grams of weight, record the weight, then weigh again in a couple weeks - when it stops losing weight (and might gain some) check weight more often until you get a few days where it never changes, then your wood has probably stabilized, and you tend to get better results finishing the bowl then...
1) Not really - As mentioned, the other problem with cracking , generally, is if you are trying to let things dry before turning - as Hockenberry said, things will turn out better if you can get the wood to a consistent thickness for the most even drying (and it does help to seal end grain in any case) - Because the wood is not an even thickness, it dries unevenly - the wood that dries is shrinking, the wood (deeper inside) that hasn't shrank as much is going to make the outer wood crack to relieve the drying stresses.Thank you Brian! I remember now wondering how it would turn out with the pith... one other bowl has the pith in it too... one doesn’t though (picture). That one has the same parallel cracks near the tenon (now filled with CA). Does that change your thoughts at all?
Regarding your comment about turning as soon as you’ve portioned the logs... if I don’t have the time to do that... is sealing the end grain with glue until I can get to it a reasonable stop-gap measure?
And I’m going to have to find either a lot more free time or a lot more patience before I can do serial weights... sigh. Some day!
I did not know the once turned, thin walled rule for piths! And I looked up radial cracks... learned that you can’t see them and they often arise when the pith isn’t bisected first thing... now I wonder if all my stock is harboring invisible radial cracks!!also if the pith is in the side wall - that will definitely cause the radial cracks.
leaving the pith in requires a thinly turned wall. Once turned.
Awesome, thank you so much! I’m wondering if waiting a couple weeks to chain saw the logs is the issue... and wondering if all the elm stock is now garbage because it’s harboring invisible radial cracks... I did cut off the checked ends (generally 3-4 inches on each side) ... but maybe waiting too long and not bisecting the pith right away has doomed it all!1) Not really - As mentioned, the other problem with cracking , generally, is if you are trying to let things dry before turning - as Hockenberry said, things will turn out better if you can get the wood to a consistent thickness for the most even drying (and it does help to seal end grain in any case) - Because the wood is not an even thickness, it dries unevenly - the wood that dries is shrinking, the wood (deeper inside) that hasn't shrank as much is going to make the outer wood crack to relieve the drying stresses.
2) Yes, In fact, try and keep logs as complete as possible until ready to both portion them and rough turn them within the same few days' time and that way you only will need to cut off maybe 3 or 4 inches from ends of logs to cut away the checking But, sealing them helps much - If you can, I'd suggest getting yourself a can of anchorseal which is basically an emulsified wax coating that you paint on (although I have also had success with plain PURE linseed oil - not boiled linseed.. I happened to have several ANCIENT quarts of it that came from my granddad's farm) Ive found it works even better if you can seal the entire portioned blank (all the way around except for bark if it is still firmly attached) - the goal is to stop/reduce/limit the drying as much as possible until you can rough out the bowl to an even thickness..
3) get a little kitchen scale (cheapie from amazon) that reads gram weights, soon as I rough a bowl, I note measurement and weight in grams just before packing it away in a box full of the shavings that came off it (I write weight on tenon, then a quick note of date, size & species of wood, and weight on the box flap - can be as many bowls as you can fit in a box) and the weighting thing only takes a matter of seconds.. then just wait the (anywhere from 3 months to 18 months depending on size & thickness) time to let things slowly dry a bit - I usually wait at least 3 months before going through a box of packed bowls, then check them for cracks/ defects. etc. tossing those that are obviously firewood (cracked tenons are often fatal to the project) and weigh them out once again.. if any seem to be still "heavy" (seat of the pants call) I might re-pack those, but the rest I set out in a cool dark place to let them finish drying.. then every once in a while on a whim I might check a few weights (and again just write weight on tenon and date checked)
Finally, if you are AAW member at all (even associate/trial member) check out this month's may issue of FUNdamentals (AAW publication) because there's a couple of good articles on bowl blank prep and log cutting in there too..
Nah -I would not condemn the whole pile because of possible radial cracks that haven't been seen yet... just be aware you need to look for them.. if you already cut them down to blank portions, your best bet is to try and cut any you possibly can to cut away the pith, I think Really a lot depends on log / blank size - if you have room to cut away pith and/or re-cut the blanks (perhaps smaller bowls? platters? worst case, rip them to spindle stock?) then you might be able to save a lot of it. However when you do go to turn the blanks into bowls, that would be the time to inspect the piece for cracking and defects (and even when I put my tenons into the jaw chuck, if I do not yet have bowl interior or bottom finished, I will always bring up tail stock at least to "just kissing" the piece, until I absolutely have to move it away - so if the tenon lets loose, it isn't as likely to go flying.. and usually for me when a tenon has let loose, it has been just shortly after I chucked it into the jaws.. although I have had a couple come off that had cracks like in your first photo.. only had to happen twice before I decided I would either cut away the tenon and make a new one (or possibly a mortise), or it went to the firewood pile..Awesome, thank you so much! I’m wondering if waiting a couple weeks to chain saw the logs is the issue... and wondering if all the elm stock is now garbage because it’s harboring invisible radial cracks... I did cut off the checked ends (generally 3-4 inches on each side) ... but maybe waiting too long and not bisecting the pith right away has doomed it all!
Its a guideline more than a rule.did not know the once turned, thin walled rule for piths! And I looked up radial cracks... learned that you can’t see them and they often arise when the pith isn’t bisected first thing... now I wonder if all my stock is harboring invisible radial cracks!!
That is a very deceptive comment or should I say guideline, a half round is still subject to checking due to the same forces of shrinkage, that is why you need to rough turn to a uniform wall thickness just like a saw mill rough cuts into flat boards. The end grain areas should be coated with some thing like Anker Seal to slow down the rapid end grain moisture loss that causes the end grain checking.cutting logs through the pith let the growth ring half’s shrink without having to crack
I think you meant well - sealing Endgrain is important.That is a very deceptive comment or should I say guideline, a half round is still subject to checking due to the same forces of shrinkage, that is why you need to rough turn to a uniform wall thickness just like a saw mill rough cuts into flat boards. The end grain areas should be coated with some thing like Anker Seal to slow down the rapid end grain moisture loss that causes the end grain checking.
Just because you have a drawing that shows the shrinkage of a half log with out any checks does not mean that it will happen that way in real life. I have gotten wood via the wood raffle at meetings in half log pieces all slathered with anchor seal on the ends with radial checks that had been kept to long without turning so I stand by my previous post.I think you meant well - sealing Endgrain is important.
“deceptive” is a bit harsh.
the slides I suggested do present both the sealing and cutting through the pith.
the diagram shows how the growth rings shrink in the half log to make a peak on the sawn face.
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Just because you have a drawing that shows the shrinkage of a half log with out any checks does not mean that it will happen that way in real life. I have gotten wood via the wood raffle at meetings in half log pieces all slathered with anchor seal on the ends with radial checks that had been kept to long without turning so I stand by my previous post.