11-04-2018, 05:56 PM
a few (well more like several) years ago I turned a few sets of knitting needles. my MIL is a champion knitter and brought a pair into the local yarn shop. the yarn shop owner bought all the ones I had. Fast forward to last week, my MIL said the owner was asking about getting more. thats the good news. the bad news is I quit making them because of some production issues.
I solved one (holding the work) by a woodnetter machining me a nylon collet that mounts in my morse taper and I slide the needle along and turn it. the remaining problems are:
1. holding the work steady. I tried a string steady but it didn't seem to work. I may also need two of them. the needles are 10mm or so diameter and about 14" long when done.
2. turning to a consistent size. I think I'm going to try grinding down a crescent wrench and sharpen one side. that way I get an instant sizing, I just turn until the open end of the wrench slides onto the piece.
3. cutting the stock to fit in the collet. tolerances are fairly tight. I no longer have a tablesaw, when I did cutting stock that small (about 1/4" x 1/4") was problematic. I have a bandsaw but I'm not confident in getting accurately size stock out of it. that is probably a technique problem. I know guys resaw veneer to incredibly tight tolerances so I should be able to do it.
suggestions? especially for making the raw stock?
I solved one (holding the work) by a woodnetter machining me a nylon collet that mounts in my morse taper and I slide the needle along and turn it. the remaining problems are:
1. holding the work steady. I tried a string steady but it didn't seem to work. I may also need two of them. the needles are 10mm or so diameter and about 14" long when done.
2. turning to a consistent size. I think I'm going to try grinding down a crescent wrench and sharpen one side. that way I get an instant sizing, I just turn until the open end of the wrench slides onto the piece.
3. cutting the stock to fit in the collet. tolerances are fairly tight. I no longer have a tablesaw, when I did cutting stock that small (about 1/4" x 1/4") was problematic. I have a bandsaw but I'm not confident in getting accurately size stock out of it. that is probably a technique problem. I know guys resaw veneer to incredibly tight tolerances so I should be able to do it.
suggestions? especially for making the raw stock?