(05-28-2022, 02:10 PM)Arlin Eastman Wrote: Do not buy high carbon steel tools. They do not last as long and if you do not know how to sharpen them they will be useless in a week. Get a cheap set of M2 tools or like you asked use carbide to learn how to turn and once you do that go to a good set of M2 or the best of M4 which I wish I could afford. Or again powdered metal.
Here are two sets for you to start with.
1. https://www.pennstateind.com/store/LCHSS8.html Cheap set with all that you need and cheap enough to learn how to sharpen them
2. https://www.amazon.com/Woodturning-DW-3-...47&sr=8-10 Good set for small turnings of 6" or less anything more and you will need a larger set.
Carbon steel is easier to sharpen than HSS, which exists because it resists abrasion better. You sharpen by abrading, right?
Carbon steel is touched up easily by stones/slips. HSS proponents seem to favor powered wheels, which abrade away much more steel touching up an edge than stones. My carbon steel set of tools which came with my Delta lathe in the 70s are a lot shorter than they used to be, but still in nearly constant service because of their forged design (gouges) or ease of touchup (straight) for those "final" passes that minimize sanding.
Yes, I have scrapers and various at the time popular alloy tools but they do hogging, mostly.
I hate to sand, so I treasure those carbon steel tools. And yes, I know that my diamond hones can touch up an alloy edge. Use them all the time. They allow me to keep the grind the tool has, which I have developed a feel for, and keep me from ruining it by a slipping or mis-set jig.
As to oval skews, one of yesterday's gimmicks, I went back to straight chisels, which were marketed as "beading tools" when I learned to turn. Single edge, long bevel can be grabby, but makes a slick bead. I broke the edges on the machined (not forged) tools to make them all roll easier. When I started turning, even skewed chisels were still available as L or R single edge.
Not sure why larger turnings would demand larger tools, as I keep my toolrest snugged close to the work so the machine can't out-leverage me on a long hang.
Better to follow the leader than the pack. Less to step in.