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First Block turned on Lathe - Happy!

Posted: Tue Jan 08, 2013 12:18 pm
by brurobas
Good afternoon guys!

I am so happy i had to take a couple of pics of the first stummel i ever turned on my new lathe. Now i only have to perfect the procedure and everything will be much easier.

The chuck jaws work very very well!

Image
Image

Regards,

Bruno

Re: First Block turned on Lathe - Happy!

Posted: Tue Jan 08, 2013 12:55 pm
by Bryan Johnson
Looks great!

What lathe do you have? "Briar claws"? Is that related to Santa Claus? Why didn't you drill the chamber while the block was still locked in, so you'ld get exact allignment? How many miles between the earth and the moon? Um... sorry, got carried away.

Re: First Block turned on Lathe - Happy!

Posted: Tue Jan 08, 2013 2:02 pm
by d.huber
What shape are you aiming for? Looks like you're going for a poker right now.

Re: First Block turned on Lathe - Happy!

Posted: Tue Jan 08, 2013 3:27 pm
by brurobas
Bryan Johnson wrote:What lathe do you have?
Hi Brian!

I have a Chester DB10GVS.
Bryan Johnson wrote:
"Briar claws"? Is that related to Santa Claus?
I meant Chuck Jaws! :D
Bryan Johnson wrote:Why didn't you drill the chamber while the block was still locked in, so you'ld get exact allignment?
I always did my drilling on a drill press and that moment i didn't feel very at ease drilling on the lathe. This is what i have to perfect.

Re: First Block turned on Lathe - Happy!

Posted: Tue Jan 08, 2013 3:29 pm
by brurobas
UberHuberMan wrote:What shape are you aiming for? Looks like you're going for a poker right now.
Hi Uber!

I am going for a poker, yes.

Re: First Block turned on Lathe - Happy!

Posted: Tue Jan 08, 2013 4:04 pm
by wmolaw
brurobas wrote:
Bryan Johnson wrote:What lathe do you have?
Hi Brian!

I have a Chester DB10GVS.
Bryan Johnson wrote:
"Briar claws"? Is that related to Santa Claus?
I meant Chuck Jaws! :D
Bryan Johnson wrote:Why didn't you drill the chamber while the block was still locked in, so you'ld get exact allignment?
I always did my drilling on a drill press and that moment i didn't feel very at ease drilling on the lathe. This is what i have to perfect.
that was the easiest part for me. So much easier than drilling on a press!

Re: First Block turned on Lathe - Happy!

Posted: Tue Jan 08, 2013 5:12 pm
by d.huber
brurobas wrote:I always did my drilling on a drill press and that moment i didn't feel very at ease drilling on the lathe. This is what i have to perfect.
Given the chuck that you have, drilling shouldn't be an issue if your block is squared. As long as you haven't started shaping the bottom portion yet, I say chuck it back up and drill away!

Re: First Block turned on Lathe - Happy!

Posted: Tue Jan 08, 2013 5:16 pm
by Growley
Congrats. Drill that sucker on your lathe. You only have to do it once before you realize, "What was I afraid of?".

Re: First Block turned on Lathe - Happy!

Posted: Tue Jan 08, 2013 5:27 pm
by e Markle
Hi Bruno,
Looks good.

If I could offer some unsolicited advice... you generally don't want to take the stummel out of the chuck between shaping and drilling. It can be a bear to line it back up exactly. Also, you might not want to make the set screws sit so deep in the block. It may not be an issue here, but it really sucks to shape a pipe on the lathe only to realize you have to bring the walls down to the low point of the pin by hand because they cut into the hidden portion of your shape.

Re: First Block turned on Lathe - Happy!

Posted: Tue Jan 08, 2013 7:04 pm
by brurobas
Growley wrote:Congrats. Drill that sucker on your lathe. You only have to do it once before you realize, "What was I afraid of?".
Thanks Growley!

I will do that! I know that i shouldn't have removed the block from the chuck but i will try!

Next time i will do everything on the lathe without removing the block from the chuck.

It was a joy to watch the briar fly away for the block!

Re: First Block turned on Lathe - Happy!

Posted: Tue Jan 08, 2013 7:05 pm
by brurobas
e Markle wrote:Hi Bruno,
Looks good.

If I could offer some unsolicited advice... you generally don't want to take the stummel out of the chuck between shaping and drilling. It can be a bear to line it back up exactly. Also, you might not want to make the set screws sit so deep in the block. It may not be an issue here, but it really sucks to shape a pipe on the lathe only to realize you have to bring the walls down to the low point of the pin by hand because they cut into the hidden portion of your shape.
Thank you!

Great advice.

I will take everything in account!

Re: First Block turned on Lathe - Happy!

Posted: Wed Jan 09, 2013 1:20 pm
by Leus
brurobas wrote:I will take everything in account!
Better not or you'll end up carving pipes with your toenails.

Re: First Block turned on Lathe - Happy!

Posted: Mon Jan 14, 2013 8:39 am
by zanthal
The way I see it, even if you weren't going for a poker or pot shape, turning the block on a lathe makes the symmetry a lot easier.

Re: First Block turned on Lathe - Happy!

Posted: Tue Jan 15, 2013 1:25 pm
by taharris
brurobas wrote:
Growley wrote:Congrats. Drill that sucker on your lathe. You only have to do it once before you realize, "What was I afraid of?".
Thanks Growley!

I will do that! I know that i shouldn't have removed the block from the chuck but i will try!

Next time i will do everything on the lathe without removing the block from the chuck.

It was a joy to watch the briar fly away for the block!
If you do remove a block with the intention of re-chucking it (or even if you don't) take a pencil and mark the outline of the chuck jaws on the block and mark which side is which.

That way if you have to re-chuck you have some guidelines to get you closer.

Todd

Re: First Block turned on Lathe - Happy!

Posted: Tue Jan 15, 2013 7:59 pm
by brurobas
Thank you for the info guys!

I have already begun a new block and i already drawn all the lines and measured everything so i don't have to remove the block from the chuck.

The air hole, mortise and countersinking area already done and it looks great. Now for some turning!

The videos from Caskwith were an awesome form of inspiration and information.