Making an Oland tool
Posted: Thu Aug 27, 2009 3:07 pm
I like to spend my time working with tools and less time sharpening them. I found the gouge quickly becomes dull when used to rough a blank from square to round. And the gouge in my opinion is not the best tool for end grain. One evening I was browsing and came upon this web site. http://www.aroundthewoods.com/oland.shtml. I watched the videos of this man using the Oland tool and decided to make one.
I first started looking on eBay for the cold rolled steel blank but was not happy with what I found. I stopped in at the local machine shop and explained what I wanted to make. The machinist went to his scrap pile and found ¾ x 18 inch piece of cold rolled steel. While at the shop he bored a hold to accept the tool steel, drilled and taped a hole for a set screw he had in the shop.
The machinist refused payment because to quote him, “it’s just some stuff I had laying around.”
Then I went to the hardware store and purchased a 1” copper connector for $1.79. From my scrap pile I found some oak.
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I mounded the oak between centers and roughed round with the Oland tool. A tenon was made to accept the copper. I found the internal diameter of the copper was 1 1/8 inch. The wood was formed, and then a ¾ bit was used to boar about 5 inches.
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I first started looking on eBay for the cold rolled steel blank but was not happy with what I found. I stopped in at the local machine shop and explained what I wanted to make. The machinist went to his scrap pile and found ¾ x 18 inch piece of cold rolled steel. While at the shop he bored a hold to accept the tool steel, drilled and taped a hole for a set screw he had in the shop.
The machinist refused payment because to quote him, “it’s just some stuff I had laying around.”
Then I went to the hardware store and purchased a 1” copper connector for $1.79. From my scrap pile I found some oak.
[ATTACH]5763[/ATTACH]
[ATTACH]5764[/ATTACH]
I mounded the oak between centers and roughed round with the Oland tool. A tenon was made to accept the copper. I found the internal diameter of the copper was 1 1/8 inch. The wood was formed, and then a ¾ bit was used to boar about 5 inches.
[ATTACH]5765[/ATTACH]
[ATTACH]5766[/ATTACH]
[ATTACH]5767[/ATTACH]