
Metal lathes offer precision that is not obtainable on a wood lathe. Sure, wood lathe can suffice, and if that's what you have, then go for it.
Please don't try to convince everyone that a wood lathe is "just as good", because it ain't.

Rad
You can put whatever you want on the shank, like the Squatch says, but some of that material can be stretchy and will develop a loose fit for your tenon. The more briar you have holding on to your tenon, the better.AlfaDog wrote:This may be a silly question but I'll ask it anyway. Couldn't the rings be attached to the shank rather than the stem? This could eliminate the need for a long tenon and the rings and shank could be drilled and turned as one unit. Or is the glue or epoxy taste the reason the rings are attached to the stem?
Also, if you use other exotic woods as rings they have a nasty tendency to crack when fitting the tenon (even with Derlin). They just don't have the same stability as Briar burl (likely because the grain in the burl is a lot more twisted.)RadDavis wrote:You can put whatever you want on the shank, like the Squatch says, but some of that material can be stretchy and will develop a loose fit for your tenon. The more briar you have holding on to your tenon, the better.AlfaDog wrote:This may be a silly question but I'll ask it anyway. Couldn't the rings be attached to the shank rather than the stem? This could eliminate the need for a long tenon and the rings and shank could be drilled and turned as one unit. Or is the glue or epoxy taste the reason the rings are attached to the stem?
Rad
What Sas means to say is "I'm kinda like the guy who used his poo to make a painting. I'm an artist, not a machinist."![]()