Coring Spalted and Softer Woods
Thank you, everyone. I've found this thread
very useful. I'm hoping to resurrect the thread and hear what others do for spalted and softer woods.
I'm coring spalted red alder, which is both soft and spalted. Tear out is aweful, which makes the going painfully and the chips love to plug. Here's what helps:
1. cutting a wider groove at the rim
2. spray water—too a certain extent
3. constant blowing 100 psi with the air chuck to clear chips
I don't have that much experience with the McNaughton, but I can make a decent core in a harder wood in a quarter of the time, maybe less.
Part of me wonders if I purchased the wrong coring system for these softer woods. I was drawn to greater versatility of the McNaughton, but I wonder if cutters like the Oneway would cut better in softer woods. I own
Hannes Michaelsen's Magnus Tool and the acute angled carbide cutter slices through these softer woods like butter. I can make a 16" platter in 20-30 seconds. Of course the Magnus Tool is only for cutting straight cores, and the cutter on the Magnus probably wouldn't work with a curved coring knife, but I suspect a different style of cutter might work better than the McNaughton scraping cutter.
As always, thanks for any thoughts or ideas.