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What's the next toy.. errr tool?

Joined
Sep 19, 2023
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Columbia, TN
Old thread re-awakening again!

I'm suffering from the need of wanting another bowl gouge. I have Thompson tools so might as well work on completing the set right?

In the back of my head I think why not get the 3/8 v bowl gouge.

**Anyone have one or is it a dust collector that never leaves the rack?** I'd forgive it for collecting some dust and only occasionally getting used.

Seems like I've settled on the 1/2 inch for most of my work and pulling the 5/8 out for green wood just because it's fun and fast. The other day I ran into a spot where I thought a smaller bowl gouge would have worked better. Guess I could have got out a skew... NOT.

I have two 3/8" bowl gouges and two 3/8" spindle gouges. The spindle gouge I use on every bowl to form the bevel on the tenon and then again to remove the final nub of the tenon. The 3/8" bowl gouges see action as finishing gouges and in tight spots.
 
Joined
Aug 12, 2022
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Location
Tavernier, FL
Yes , Looking forward to it. What are you using for a blade. Im sure the one that comes with it, is probably not the best.
I will be using it mostly to cut blanks from logs
 
Joined
Feb 2, 2016
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Location
Clinton, TN
Yes , Looking forward to it. What are you using for a blade. Im sure the one that comes with it, is probably not the best.
I will be using it mostly to cut blanks from logs

Sticking my nose into the conversation: for cutting up log sections into blanks, with my 18" Rikon I use only 1/2" 3tpi Lenox blades for wood up to 12" thick. There are Lenox bandsaw shops all over, one near me, that can make any type, any size. The guy sometimes makes one as I wait but I usually order ahead of time and get 8 or 10 at once.

You may have already seen this but if not and you are interested, I did a video on using the bandsaw to make blanks from log sections. It was for a Zoom pandemic demo. I had to leave out a lot so it's a little short on the details of successful drying.


JKJ
 
Joined
Aug 14, 2007
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Eugene, OR
I use the Lennox bimetal blades. The big saw has a 1 1/4 wide by teeth at 3/4 inch apart. Best for cutting slabs. My little saw has 1/2 inch with 3 tpi. This one is for cutting circles.

robo hippy
 
Joined
Feb 26, 2019
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Lebanon, Missouri
My most used tools are the Thompson 3/8 detail and bowl gouges. All of my 3/8 tools -- lots of them -- have only 7-8" handles. None have a 12". My smaller skews also have similarly short handles.
My 5/8ā€ BGā€™s (Thompson/Jamieson, Crown Razor m42 parabolic) have ~12ā€ handles for leverage when roughing stuff out. No 1/2ā€ shaft BG, mine drop down to 3/8ā€, they have ~8ā€ handle, as do all the other tools except a couple of larger scrapers that are a bit longer. Long handles on smaller tools do get in the way.
 
Joined
Feb 2, 2016
Messages
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Location
Clinton, TN
New shop tool?

This is mine, a very recent addition, a Yamaha P525 digital piano.

Why is it good in the shop? So I can stretch and exercise my fingers when taking a break. (Helps with finger cramps that old people sometimes get when holding lathe tools too long) To practice on a whim without walking up the hill to the house. To play loudly, even in the middle of the night, without disturbing the family with the Baldwin in the house. To entertain visitors so they'll give me money. (ha, joke) So I can compose and practice arrangements and variations in private with abandon. The llamas and peacocks next to the shop don't seem to mind.

And yes, I do use a good dust cover.

shop-piano.jpg

I have racks of pro midi keyboards and synthesizers in storage above the garage but they take up too much space. In case no one else has noticed, shop space tends toward limited ...

This is the 3rd one I've tried in the shop and has the best piano action (extremely important) and best sound without spending $4000. For variety, in the little shop office are a guitar, violin, harmonicas, melodica, and cornet. And over 4000 songs on the computer sound system. A shop is good for the life. Music is good for the soul.

Extra musical tidbit, unrelated to the shop: my piano bench in the house is a good conversation piece - it's the actual bench Billy Joel sat on when in concert here in the late '70s.

JKJ
 
Joined
Feb 18, 2023
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Orange, CA
it's the actual bench Billy Joel sat on when in concert here in the late '70s.
I must have seen that bench. In college in 1973 in Durham, NC, friend took me to a concert in Raleighā€”said he had heard that this new guy was pretty good. As students we had cheap seats way back in the auditorium where he played, but since only about a dozen people came to the concert, Billy Joel had us all come on stage and sit around him as he played. Cold Spring Harbor was his first album and I think Piano Man was about to come out. It was amazing.
 
Joined
Feb 2, 2016
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Location
Clinton, TN
I must have seen that bench. In college in 1973 in Durham, NC, friend took me to a concert in Raleighā€”said he had heard that this new guy was pretty good. As students we had cheap seats way back in the auditorium where he played, but since only about a dozen people came to the concert, Billy Joel had us all come on stage and sit around him as he played. Cold Spring Harbor was his first album and I think Piano Man was about to come out. It was amazing.

Very cool! Incredibly amazing and I'm jealous - I wish I could have been a accidental Billy Joel groupie! I was impressed at one of his concerts when he jumped off the stage and ran up and down the central isle interacting with people!

But you may have seen a different bench. If what they told me at the Baldwin store was correct, Joel didn't travel with a bench but rented the one I now have, just for that concert. (It's a concert bench with the height adjustment knobs on either side.) After that, it was "used" so they sold it to me at a discount. I bought a 7' Baldwin grand at the same time so with that and Joel's rental fee I don't think they lost any money! Both the bench and the piano have served me well over nearly the last half century. Prob the best purchase of my life (besides a certain ring, of course!)

Here it is sometime in the '90s. (I and my siblings were raised by parents who strongly believed that music education was just as important as reading, writing, and arithmetic!)

piano_midi_P8051382.jpg
JKJ
 
Joined
Dec 29, 2022
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USA
Well, the next tool ended up being a Jet AFS 1000b air filter. Just got home with it.

They had a good price on them at the local wood store and I had a gift card I'd won from my clubs president challenges that made it an even better price so hopefully cleaner air is in my future.
 
Last edited:
Joined
Dec 7, 2022
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Location
Burnaby, BC
Just bought a new to me Oneway 2436 from a club member. I didn't realize the difference between it and my old Delta DL 40 that was heavily modified. Very happy with it. The Oneway had less than 150 items turned on it and it shows. I added a 17" bed extension and extra banjo to the outboard side...Cant wait for Christmas vacation when I can spend much of a week on it!
 
Joined
Dec 29, 2022
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USA
Just bought a new to me Oneway 2436 from a club member. I didn't realize the difference between it and my old Delta DL 40 that was heavily modified. Very happy with it. The Oneway had less than 150 items turned on it and it shows. I added a 17" bed extension and extra banjo to the outboard side...Cant wait for Christmas vacation when I can spend much of a week on it!
I'd love to have a one way banjo but I checked the price and got scared,
 
Joined
Feb 2, 2016
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Location
Clinton, TN
I am firmly in the camp of loving Steb centers, for more reasons that I care to list. And today my next set arrived, the last and largest of the three. Yay! My shop is now complete. I need nothing else.

Steb_centers_3.jpg

JKJ
 
Joined
Feb 7, 2023
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Location
Gardner, MA
A bigger scraper for the shop.
51WYUs7ULrL._AC_SL1500_.jpg

Also picked up one of these jackets recommended in the other thread. I like it very much!
61RlDz0ayDL._AC_SX679_.jpg

Also a new play tool. Should be in just before Christmas.
61QcDLI+jkL._AC_SL1500_.jpg
 
Joined
Dec 29, 2022
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Joined
Feb 2, 2016
Messages
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Location
Clinton, TN
Found a you tube video that I wished I'd seen before I did this bottom. It would probably look different than it does now.

That's with the spiraling wheel, right? Does the tool also come with a star wheel with sharp points?
I just replaced the Sorby Micro spiraling/texturing tool that I gave away a few years go - it came with two sizes of spiraling wheels and one pointed texturing wheel. (I get more use out of the pointed wheels)

I have played some with spiraling wheels, seems like you only get one chance!
texture_IMG_7845e.jpg
If I want spiral texturing on something like, say, a box lid, I feel safer cheating - texture a thin disk then glue it into a recess in the box lid!

Hey, do you know Frank Penta? You can't hang out with Frank without a texturing tool in your pocket - he's a hard-core texturing maniac. :)

JKJ
 
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