02-04-2016, 11:16 PM
I do not know the specifics for your 1" belt sander, but you might want to take a look at the Shopsmith Chisel Sharpening Attachment for their Strip Sander. You could probably make an equivalent for your Delta. A strip sander is an excellent tool for sharpening roughing gouges and skews and you can make jigs for sharpening other gouges.
Most of the carbide tools are scrapers. The Hunter tools are not, but they are a specialty set of tools for interiors.
I admit that I fall back to the carbide tools when I am having a bad day and I need to turn something sturdy in a hurry. They lack the finesse, though, for finials and they will never give you as smooth a surface as a properly sharpened and applied skew or gouge (or a steel scraper with a proper burr for finish work).
The 8" slow speed grinder with the Wolverine jig is the common denominator that seems to be everywhere these days. I have and use one. I am not using it to its full possibilities. I have much to learn. I also have some fellow club members who have offered to help me get better at sharpening. I will be taking them up on it when the temperature in the shop gets a bit more livable.
The recommendation to take advantage of your local club is a good one. If you can find a local mentor there, it can help immensely.
I look forward to seeing pictures of your turnings.
I also look forward to getting some pieces completed so that I can once again prove that my photographic skills are even worse than my turning skills.
Most of the carbide tools are scrapers. The Hunter tools are not, but they are a specialty set of tools for interiors.
I admit that I fall back to the carbide tools when I am having a bad day and I need to turn something sturdy in a hurry. They lack the finesse, though, for finials and they will never give you as smooth a surface as a properly sharpened and applied skew or gouge (or a steel scraper with a proper burr for finish work).
The 8" slow speed grinder with the Wolverine jig is the common denominator that seems to be everywhere these days. I have and use one. I am not using it to its full possibilities. I have much to learn. I also have some fellow club members who have offered to help me get better at sharpening. I will be taking them up on it when the temperature in the shop gets a bit more livable.
The recommendation to take advantage of your local club is a good one. If you can find a local mentor there, it can help immensely.
I look forward to seeing pictures of your turnings.
I also look forward to getting some pieces completed so that I can once again prove that my photographic skills are even worse than my turning skills.
"the most important safety feature on any tool is the one between your ears." - Ken Vick
A wish for you all: May you keep buying green bananas.
A wish for you all: May you keep buying green bananas.