Beginning Pen Turner - Printable Version +- Woodnet Forums (https://forums.woodnet.net) +-- Thread: Beginning Pen Turner (/showthread.php?tid=7325621) Pages:
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RE: Beginning Pen Turner - AHill - 11-28-2016 (11-28-2016, 11:40 AM)NCPaladin Wrote: I can't reply to materials for pen turning but... You don't need a chuck at all to turn pens. You can do the whole process with a pen mandrel and live center once you've drilled out the blanks and glued in the barrels. See my other post on the process. RE: Beginning Pen Turner - crokett™ - 11-29-2016 adding to what was said, a pen mill is faster, but not required to square the ends of blanks. Before I got a pen mill set I used a disc sander with a miter gauge. Having used both CA (superglue) and epoxy to glue the tubes into the blanks, I've had much better results with epoxy. I don't use a chuck to turn pens, I use a pen mandril. I have a center for the tailstock that fits over the mandrel and up against the bushing. You can turn pens between centers, but you have to do them one section of the pen at a time and you need a good set of calipers. Bushings + pen mandrel make the process faster. RE: Beginning Pen Turner - chips ahoy - 11-29-2016 I have a G3 chuck with pin jaws and use a Jacobs chuck in the tail stock to drill my blanks.Prefer it to the drill press.Alan's advice is spot on. Mel RE: Beginning Pen Turner - crokett™ - 11-29-2016 (11-29-2016, 09:57 AM)chips ahoy Wrote: I have a G3 chuck with pin jaws and use a Jacobs chuck in the tail stock to drill my blanks.Prefer it to the drill press.Alan's advice is spot on. This is going to be one of those to each his own, but I still use the DP. The chuck on the lathe doesn't work for non-square/round blanks like antler, which I've discovered the hard way works much better if the blank is drilled before it is turned. It's tough to line the blank up along the proper axis for turning so you don't turn it too small. That and I've only one chuck so don't have to keep changing out the jaws. RE: Beginning Pen Turner - chips ahoy - 11-29-2016 I agree with you Crockett,some materials cannot be drilled straight on the lathe so the DP is the better choice. Mel |