Amazing turning project, done on a Shopsmith
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- BuckeyeDennis
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- Joined: Tue Jul 24, 2012 10:03 pm
- Location: Central Ohio
Amazing turning project, done on a Shopsmith
I just saw this project posted over on LumberJocks, and thought you guys would like to see it too. Check it out.
The turning was done on a Shopsmith with a speed reducer. Here's a link to some process photos. I strongly suspect that the process used to "stretch it out" (the glued-up blank) involves a Ring Master, but the author didn't give any details.
The turning was done on a Shopsmith with a speed reducer. Here's a link to some process photos. I strongly suspect that the process used to "stretch it out" (the glued-up blank) involves a Ring Master, but the author didn't give any details.
Re: Amazing turning project, done on a Shopsmith
That's beautiful work and further proof of the fact that the folks who say the Shopsmith isn't a good lathe (table saw, drill press, etc.) aren't really familiar with its capabilities.
Gale's Law: The bigger the woodworking project, the less the mistakes show in any photo taken far enough away to show the entire project!
Re: Amazing turning project, done on a Shopsmith
Berry took the word right out of my mouth!
Wow!
Wow!
Octogenarian's have an earned right to be a curmudgeon.
Chuck in Lancaster, CA
Chuck in Lancaster, CA
- rjent
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- Location: Hot Springs, New Mexico
Re: Amazing turning project, done on a Shopsmith
Good grief! That is gorgeous!
Dick
1965 Mark VII S/N 407684
1951 10 ER S/N ER 44570 -- Reborn 9/16/14
1950 10 ER S/N ER 33479 Reborn July 2016
1950 10 ER S/N ER 39671
1951 jigsaw X 2
1951 !0 ER #3 in rebuild
500, Jointer, Bsaw, Bsander, Planer
2014 Mark 7 W/Lift assist - 14 4" Jointer - DC3300
And a plethora of small stuff .....
"The trouble with quotes on the Internet is that you can never know if they are genuine." - Benjamin Franklin
1965 Mark VII S/N 407684
1951 10 ER S/N ER 44570 -- Reborn 9/16/14
1950 10 ER S/N ER 33479 Reborn July 2016
1950 10 ER S/N ER 39671
1951 jigsaw X 2
1951 !0 ER #3 in rebuild
500, Jointer, Bsaw, Bsander, Planer
2014 Mark 7 W/Lift assist - 14 4" Jointer - DC3300
And a plethora of small stuff .....
"The trouble with quotes on the Internet is that you can never know if they are genuine." - Benjamin Franklin
-
- Platinum Member
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- Joined: Wed Feb 05, 2014 11:57 am
- Location: Las Vegas NV
Re: Amazing turning project, done on a Shopsmith
That really is amazing. True art. As far as people bad mouthing the lathe capabilities of a Shopsmith they need to try one. Besides, turning isn't really about the machine. It's more about the person doing the turning !
Paul
Paul
Re: Amazing turning project, done on a Shopsmith
Alan, let me be the first to say, the table saw function of ANY Shopsmith isalgale wrote:That's beautiful work and further proof of the fact that the folks who say the Shopsmith isn't a good lathe (table saw, drill press, etc.) aren't really familiar with its capabilities.
barely adequate. ESPECIALLY my Model 10 stuff, Those are trim
saws at best.
My brother, the one that just (finally!) got a Model 10, has a
table saw, that has extension tables that cover a 8 foot by 8
foot area. (My first apartment would fit under that table!)
Now, drill press, (both versions) and lathe, state of the art!.
Disc sander? EVER see one that you could advance the disc into a piece of work?
Me neither. Best disc sander on the market! Using the sanding disc, after cutting
on the table saw, everything lines up, even after making a compound cut.
Cutting and sanding to length? Getting 27 pieces cut to 1 or 2 thousandths variance?
try THAT with something else, especially after an angled cut!
steve
10 ER, stripped down.
Basic 10ER, Parts machine. Will be a semi-dedicated drill-press machine.
10 ER, a "survivor" of the trailer fire, in the back yard, needing restoration. Has a Mk5 headrest. Finally, stripped down.
Numerous parts, for Model 10 stuff. Except for lower saw guard, A and B adapters, I've got it.
Looking for one more, or some 9 inch extension table raisers.
Basic 10ER, Parts machine. Will be a semi-dedicated drill-press machine.
10 ER, a "survivor" of the trailer fire, in the back yard, needing restoration. Has a Mk5 headrest. Finally, stripped down.
Numerous parts, for Model 10 stuff. Except for lower saw guard, A and B adapters, I've got it.
Looking for one more, or some 9 inch extension table raisers.
Re: Amazing turning project, done on a Shopsmith
Steve,skou wrote:Alan, let me be the first to say, the table saw function of ANY Shopsmith isalgale wrote:That's beautiful work and further proof of the fact that the folks who say the Shopsmith isn't a good lathe (table saw, drill press, etc.) aren't really familiar with its capabilities.
barely adequate. ESPECIALLY my Model 10 stuff, Those are trim
saws at best.
My brother, the one that just (finally!) got a Model 10, has a
table saw, that has extension tables that cover a 8 foot by 8
foot area. (My first apartment would fit under that table!)
Now, drill press, (both versions) and lathe, state of the art!.
Disc sander? EVER see one that you could advance the disc into a piece of work?
Me neither. Best disc sander on the market! Using the sanding disc, after cutting
on the table saw, everything lines up, even after making a compound cut.
Cutting and sanding to length? Getting 27 pieces cut to 1 or 2 thousandths variance?
try THAT with something else, especially after an angled cut!
steve
You and I will have to disagree on the table saw issue.
I've used what I consider a barely adequate table saw. I purchased it new in 1999. It was a big Sears-branded "professional" contractor saw manufactured by one of the big table saw manufacturers. It came with a big cast iron table, a big cast iron extension wing and a 1.75 HP motor. It looked impressive as heck. It also came with a rip fence that could not hold alignment, trunions that heeled the blade when I attempted to make bevel cuts, a loose-fitting miter gauge with a terrible-to-use hold down, a splitter that was impossible to align and a hassle to put on or take off and its dust collection was next to useless. Even with a 1.75 HP motor (5/8ths HP more than my 520), that table saw would stall out or burn cuts I routinely make with my 520 and that are glue joint ready.
Obviously it will take me a lot longer than your brother with his table saw built into an enormous platform to set up the extension and floating tables of my 520 to cross cut very long boards or to set up my homemade outfeed table to make very long rip cuts.
But based on my experience with a barely adequate saw, I utterly reject the idea that the time it takes one to set up to make the cut is an important criteria when it comes to judging the adequacy of table saw (at least for someone who is not in a business where one uses a table saw and thus one's time is money).
I've never used any of the Model 10s so I'll defer to you on its capabilities in the table saw department.
Al
Gale's Law: The bigger the woodworking project, the less the mistakes show in any photo taken far enough away to show the entire project!
- Ed in Tampa
- Platinum Member
- Posts: 5834
- Joined: Fri Jul 21, 2006 12:45 am
- Location: North Tampa Bay area Florida
Re: Amazing turning project, done on a Shopsmith
Come on Al comparing a Sears zip code saw to a real saw? Major company (Orion??)algale wrote:Steve,skou wrote:Alan, let me be the first to say, the table saw function of ANY Shopsmith isalgale wrote:That's beautiful work and further proof of the fact that the folks who say the Shopsmith isn't a good lathe (table saw, drill press, etc.) aren't really familiar with its capabilities.
barely adequate. ESPECIALLY my Model 10 stuff, Those are trim
saws at best.
My brother, the one that just (finally!) got a Model 10, has a
table saw, that has extension tables that cover a 8 foot by 8
foot area. (My first apartment would fit under that table!)
Now, drill press, (both versions) and lathe, state of the art!.
Disc sander? EVER see one that you could advance the disc into a piece of work?
Me neither. Best disc sander on the market! Using the sanding disc, after cutting
on the table saw, everything lines up, even after making a compound cut.
Cutting and sanding to length? Getting 27 pieces cut to 1 or 2 thousandths variance?
try THAT with something else, especially after an angled cut!
steve
You and I will have to disagree on the table saw issue.
I've used what I consider a barely adequate table saw. I purchased it new in 1999. It was a big Sears-branded "professional" contractor saw manufactured by one of the big table saw manufacturers. It came with a big cast iron table, a big cast iron extension wing and a 1.75 HP motor. It looked impressive as heck. It also came with a rip fence that could not hold alignment, trunions that heeled the blade when I attempted to make bevel cuts, a loose-fitting miter gauge with a terrible-to-use hold down, a splitter that was impossible to align and a hassle to put on or take off and its dust collection was next to useless. Even with a 1.75 HP motor (5/8ths HP more than my 520), that table saw would stall out or burn cuts I routinely make with my 520 and that are glue joint ready.
Obviously it will take me a lot longer than your brother with his table saw built into an enormous platform to set up the extension and floating tables of my 520 to cross cut very long boards or to set up my homemade outfeed table to make very long rip cuts.
But based on my experience with a barely adequate saw, I utterly reject the idea that the time it takes one to set up to make the cut is an important criteria when it comes to judging the adequacy of table saw (at least for someone who is not in a business where one uses a table saw and thus one's time is money).
I've never used any of the Model 10s so I'll defer to you on its capabilities in the table saw department.
Al
Which is now out business. How about a Ridgid 3650 table saw for around $600 which had none of those defects. My motto only buy from Sears things that do not have motors or engines. Exception appliances which seem to do well.
Oh by the way there is a fix for heeling. Besides aligning blade to fence or miter slot make sure the trunnions are in the same plane in all directions.
Re: Amazing turning project, done on a Shopsmith
Who made that comparison, Ed? Not me! I said my old table saw was an example of a barely adequate one and tried to list the things that made it so. By the way, it was NOT a zip code saw and not made by Orion but IIRC by Ryobi. It cost about $500 in 1999.Ed in Tampa wrote:
Come on Al comparing a Sears zip code saw to a real saw? Major company (Orion??)
Which is now out business. How about a Ridgid 3650 table saw for around $600 which had none of those defects. My motto only buy from Sears things that do not have motors or engines. Exception appliances which seem to do well.
Oh by the way there is a fix for heeling. Besides aligning blade to fence or miter slot make sure the trunnions are in the same plane in all directions.
Gale's Law: The bigger the woodworking project, the less the mistakes show in any photo taken far enough away to show the entire project!