• Congratulations to Alex Bradley winner of the December 2024 Turning Challenge (click here for details)
  • Conversations are now Direct Messages (click here for details)
  • Congratulations to Gabriel Hoff for "Spalted Beech Round Bottom Box" being selected as Turning of the Week for January 6, 2024 (click here for details)
  • Welcome new registering member. Your username must be your real First and Last name (for example: John Doe). "Screen names" and "handles" are not allowed and your registration will be deleted if you don't use your real name. Also, do not use all caps nor all lower case.

SRG: How measured?

Joined
Apr 26, 2004
Messages
349
Likes
0
Location
Rural La Farge, Wisconsin
Website
www.token.crwoodturner.com
Simple question about spindle roughing gouges, the next tool on my wish list.

Catalog listings have 3/4", 1", 1 1/4" sizes and more--is this the flute width, or the total width? Are the measurements standard across brands?
 
Depends

I don't remember which is which, but the Americans measure one way and the English measure the other. That said, there is no "standard". The only constant is within a brand.

And don't forget that some manufacturers, such as P&N, use metric dimensions.
 
The bigger one is broader. About all you can count on. For example, my Sorby roughing gouge is 1.125 inside, 1.5 outside dimension, and lists as 1.25. My Sorby "35mm" gouge is 32mm inside, 41mm outside dimension. My "American measurement" 1" Serious bowl gouge is a 1" cylinder. with .625 flute, while my Henry Taylor .75" is indeed .75 with a .5 flute.

I guess the numbers are as consistent as the nomenclature.

My Inch and a Quarter is about my most used gouge, starting almost all turnings. I've been working with him for over ten years, and he's an inch shorter then what he was when new. I think a 3/4 would curve a bit too fast to be as effective a slicer as the broader radius.
 
Back
Top