Follow along with the video below to see how to install our site as a web app on your home screen.
Note: This feature may not be available in some browsers.
Are you looking for a coupon code to buy my software? You can get one from lots of 3rd party sites but they won't work. My software never goes on sale and has never been discounted. The only coupon codes that are given is when I give a club presentation and I offer a discount to the attendees. Other than that, everyone pays the same price.
I almost always use 1/4" thickness for both open and closed vessels. That seems to be a good compromise between the "wow"factor of lightness and risk of damaging the bowl before completion. I have gone as thin as 0.050" on a few that are made with resin stabilized pen blanks. Photo attached.
The arms that hold the wheels can be arranged at almost any angle and at any position around the support structure. Also the front 2/3 can be quickly removed so that you can have the support behind the bowl (for turning the outside, if necessary) and no obstruction from the support. That may be...
I made one similar to yours years ago and it works well much of the time. It was inexpensive to make but it doesn't have the versatility of the Carter version, which is pretty expensive.
I had one similar to the Carter (but a different brand) and found it heavy and difficult to maneuver. The articulated systems are virtually friction free and I find them easy to use (not that hollowing is ever "easy").
Hi Frank:
The bottom image show the automobile backup system I am using. It includes both camera and monitor. The monitor is only 7" but where I have it mounted it is quite adequate and it has the virtue of being able to eliminate the backup lines that cannot be eliminated on some backup...
A friend and fellow turner tipped me off that he had abandoned his laser hollowing system for one that uses a camera and a monitor. I did a bit of polking around on the web and found a nice video by Michael Gibson ("Hollowing with a Monitor") on Youtube. So, I took the plunge and bought an...
This open-segment bowl is 7-1/4" diameter x 9-1/8" high and is made of 5125 pieces of wood, including maple, purple heart, pau ferro, yellow heart, bloodwood, chakte viga, limba, ebony, and quilted maple. This bowl is somewhat unique because there is no symmetry--it looks different from every...
4-1/2" diameter x 4" high. Western maple burl and Gabon ebony. I started to make a bowl like this 4 years ago but got careless while hollowing and blew out the sidewall. So, I bought another bowl blank and waited 2 years for the blank to dry, then rough turned it and gave it another year to...
The pattern is after our Islander 30/II auxiliary sloop that we owned and sailed on S.F. Bay and environs for 21 years. It is 8-1/4" diameter x 9-1/2" tall. Made of maple, bubinga, holly, blue-dyed maple, yellowheart, bloodwood, chalet-viga, and ebony. 4850 pieces of wood. I made it for one of...
8-1/8" high x 8-1/4" diameter. Purpleheart, maple, limba, and silver-dyed maple. 4218 Pieces of wood. Made for one of my daughters, who, with her husband, intends to retire to California wine country.
I'll do that after I do some experiments with different thicknesses of wood next week. For 3/16" thick maple, however, it was uniform color all the way through using a dark magenta dye.
I used water-based aniline dye (Moser's). Alcohol might be difficult for a couple of reasons. First methyl (and other forms of alcohol) have lower boiling temperatures at 1 atmosphere than water so I suspect (I haven't looked it up) they would boil at a higher pressure than water, which means...
I'll be away this week, but I'll try your suggestion when I get back and post the results. It looked to me like most of the bubbles came out of the ends, so I suspect that most of the dye gets in that way too. If that is the case, thickness may not matter as much as length.