Nice job Chris. I really appreciate you showing the pull cut and explaining how your fingers were pulling the gouge. I wouldn't have noticed what your did unless you pointed it out. That is helpful info.
Wow ! What a great video, clear and concise. Love the form of your bowl as well. So tired of seeing bowls with 1" thick sides. Your bowl is much finer.
I've watched a lot of different channels with wood turning in them, and a vast majority of them either don't talk, or they have some awful music attached, and at times its a toss up of either the music, or the lathe sound overpowering the other. THIS video, I love how you explain each process and how/why you use it that way! Sub from me!
One step I make sure to do with every single bowl when turning the inside, is to break or ease that outside rim edge. If you leave it square, it will slice your hands if you even get close to it. I did that once....
What ever speed you feel comfortable at. You can turn a bowl this size as fast as 1000 rpms if you want but you do not need to turn that fast to get good results. As long as your using sharp tools, proper technique, and a feed rate that matches the speed you can get clean cuts. Feed rate is the speed you move the tool across the tool rest. Faster speeds just makes the process go faster.
It all depends on your budget. If your on a tight budget but want something that will last you can get a 10 inch rikon that you change pulley positions to adjust speed. The best bang for your buck is the nova comet 2. Its variable speed by a dial and has a 14 inch swing but is a little more expensive.
If you know what you want to turn, look for a lathe suited to that. No need for a huge lathe if you're going to turn pens and tops. I bought an ancient lathe from a school that was selling off old shop equipment. After a year, I had a good idea of what I needed and didn't need. Bought at Laguna 12/16, not expensive, but it will do all I need it to do. Find a club near you. Members will be happy to help, maybe even give you some hands-on with different lathes.
I listened twice at 2:00 to be sure you said 3/8 drill bit rather than 5/16. At 8:22, with tailstock removed, there is an obvious wobble, and at 9:00 you said that the piece had loosened on the screw. I doubt that would have happened if you pilot hole had been 5/16. That's all I ever use because that's all I've seen anyone else use, and if the wood is soft, maybe 9/32. Curious as to why you used a 3/8.
I tend to turn bowls on the faster side. Something this size i tend to turn between 600 and 1000 rpms but you should turn at a speed that feels comfortable to you. The larger the bowl the slower you want to turn. If your lathe starts to shake you should turn the speed down if the blank is off balance. If the lathe starts to shake in the middle of turning with no change to the speed you need to stop the lathe and evaluate the bowl. Hope that helps.
I made it from a piece of high speed steel I purchased online. Its not difficult to make with a grinder and is unhandled. The bar is about 2 1/2 inches wide and 1/8 inches thick.
Crazy.. Why o why does my gouge ALWAYS catch whenever I do the inside or under side of the bowl? No matter what technique I use it ALWAYS grabs and rips chunks out of the bowl
Sometimes its hard if you don't have a mentor to point out whats wrong. It could be something with your grind or the way your presenting the gouge to the wood. If your in an area that has woodturning clubs my best suggestion would be to join one. Turners are very willing to share there time and knowledge with new turners. Here is a link to the American association of woodturners website search page. You can put your location in and find clubs in your area. woodturner.org/Woodturner/Woodturner/AAWConnects/AAW-Connects.aspx?hkey=1c4d6fa8-6094-4dd1-888a-e0c3e2809c3e
Practice cutting a straight sided bowl , cone shaped and not too steep so you don't have a bottom. Watch the video at 11:30 you can see he can't continue to cut to the bottom and has to change the way the tool cuts, any further in and the unsupported edge of the tool would catch. Don't give up you will get there
When you start into the inside of the bowl at the rim, turn the gouge 90° to the right and start with the handle pointed at the tailstock or even behind the bedways. To make the transition from the bowl side to the bowls bottom, pull the handle into your hip as you make the corner, then hold the handle against your hip/side to continue the cut across the bowls bottom to the center. You can turn the gouge 90° left and cut from the center to the corner but stop before you get to the corner or you'll likely have a catch.
Well to start with this guy is over explaining like crazy, when I was 12 my shop teacher said half as much, the bowl blank was easily near 10” and he was going to make a 6” bowl, extreme waste , and hand holding a divider to mark a mortice ? The bowl is running out of true while he's doing the mortice that means the bowl wasn't secure on the worm screw( it happens but just leave it, no need to correct a few thou when you flip it, but it's unsecured on the screw) And that's just off the top of my head and I am an amateur. This guy has no business instructing anyone
Thank you sir for keeping it real..(simple)..Your vid was extremely helpful,,Greetings from the uk
Glad it was helpful!
Just been given a lathe for my birthday. Great tutorial.
Nice job Chris. I really appreciate you showing the pull cut and explaining how your fingers were pulling the gouge. I wouldn't have noticed what your did unless you pointed it out. That is helpful info.
Glad it was helpful!
Thanks.... many of the basics explained really well without the glitz, much appreciated !!
Glad it was helpful!
Brilliant video for a novice turner like myself
Thank you for watching and the kind words.
Thank you! Very informative for someone starting out on first simple bowl!
Well explained. Thank you for sharing
Glad it was helpful!
Excellent video… short and sweet! 🎉
Thank you! 😃
Nice work , wish more turners would explain each step as you did, to many are just silent when showing a video
Thanks 👍
Thank you for the information and showing all the details.
Glad it was helpful!
Wow ! What a great video, clear and concise. Love the form of your bowl as well. So tired of seeing bowls with 1" thick sides. Your bowl is much finer.
Thank you very much!
very nice bowl!
Thank you for sharing this nice video.
Beautiful
Thank you! Cheers!
BEAUTIFUL
Beautiful!
I've watched a lot of different channels with wood turning in them, and a vast majority of them either don't talk, or they have some awful music attached, and at times its a toss up of either the music, or the lathe sound overpowering the other. THIS video, I love how you explain each process and how/why you use it that way! Sub from me!
Thank you
Really. Nice work
Thank you! Cheers!
Beginners need to see the recess you cut in the bottom and see you attach it to the chuck.
nice job, good explain..., thanks...
You're welcome!
Good basic instruction.
Thanks Doug been trying to put out more instruction based videos instead of just watch me turn.
Would have liked to see what it looked like when you flipped it
One step I make sure to do with every single bowl when turning the inside, is to break or ease that outside rim edge. If you leave it square, it will slice your hands if you even get close to it. I did that once....
Good point
thanks for posting this!
Nice video you make it look so easy. How many different tools did you use? This is where it gets confusing to me.
And what size jaws are you using & the bowel size? Thanks
The bowl size was roughly 6 inches in diameter and the jaws were the stock 50mm ones that came with the chuck.
As someone thats waiting on his 1st lathe, with no 1 on 1 help. Whats a common lathe rpm for bowels?
What ever speed you feel comfortable at. You can turn a bowl this size as fast as 1000 rpms if you want but you do not need to turn that fast to get good results. As long as your using sharp tools, proper technique, and a feed rate that matches the speed you can get clean cuts. Feed rate is the speed you move the tool across the tool rest. Faster speeds just makes the process go faster.
Great work am curious where you learned these methods?
Thanks for watching. I am mostly self taught most of my turning methods are from adapting techniques that work for me through trial and error.
Excellent instructions and video. Thank you. Can you recommend what type wood lathe I should look for as a beginner?
It all depends on your budget. If your on a tight budget but want something that will last you can get a 10 inch rikon that you change pulley positions to adjust speed. The best bang for your buck is the nova comet 2. Its variable speed by a dial and has a 14 inch swing but is a little more expensive.
If you know what you want to turn, look for a lathe suited to that. No need for a huge lathe if you're going to turn pens and tops. I bought an ancient lathe from a school that was selling off old shop equipment. After a year, I had a good idea of what I needed and didn't need. Bought at Laguna 12/16, not expensive, but it will do all I need it to do.
Find a club near you. Members will be happy to help, maybe even give you some hands-on with different lathes.
I listened twice at 2:00 to be sure you said 3/8 drill bit rather than 5/16. At 8:22, with tailstock removed, there is an obvious wobble, and at 9:00 you said that the piece had loosened on the screw. I doubt that would have happened if you pilot hole had been 5/16. That's all I ever use because that's all I've seen anyone else use, and if the wood is soft, maybe 9/32.
Curious as to why you used a 3/8.
Because he really never seen a professional.
what speeds do you turn the bowel
I tend to turn bowls on the faster side. Something this size i tend to turn between 600 and 1000 rpms but you should turn at a speed that feels comfortable to you. The larger the bowl the slower you want to turn. If your lathe starts to shake you should turn the speed down if the blank is off balance. If the lathe starts to shake in the middle of turning with no change to the speed you need to stop the lathe and evaluate the bowl. Hope that helps.
thanks!@@BlackLabelwoodworks
We're you at 400 rpms through the whole turning?
Where did you get that 90 degree straight edge?
I made it from a piece of high speed steel I purchased online. Its not difficult to make with a grinder and is unhandled. The bar is about 2 1/2 inches wide and 1/8 inches thick.
Crazy.. Why o why does my gouge ALWAYS catch whenever I do the inside or under side of the bowl? No matter what technique I use it ALWAYS grabs and rips chunks out of the bowl
Sometimes its hard if you don't have a mentor to point out whats wrong. It could be something with your grind or the way your presenting the gouge to the wood. If your in an area that has woodturning clubs my best suggestion would be to join one. Turners are very willing to share there time and knowledge with new turners. Here is a link to the American association of woodturners website search page. You can put your location in and find clubs in your area. woodturner.org/Woodturner/Woodturner/AAWConnects/AAW-Connects.aspx?hkey=1c4d6fa8-6094-4dd1-888a-e0c3e2809c3e
Thank you very much :) @@BlackLabelwoodworks
Practice cutting a straight sided bowl , cone shaped and not too steep so you don't have a bottom. Watch the video at 11:30 you can see he can't continue to cut to the bottom and has to change the way the tool cuts, any further in and the unsupported edge of the tool would catch. Don't give up you will get there
When you start into the inside of the bowl at the rim, turn the gouge 90° to the right and start with the handle pointed at the tailstock or even behind the bedways. To make the transition from the bowl side to the bowls bottom, pull the handle into your hip as you make the corner, then hold the handle against your hip/side to continue the cut across the bowls bottom to the center.
You can turn the gouge 90° left and cut from the center to the corner but stop before you get to the corner or you'll likely have a catch.
What is sanding paste? How, When & Why do you use it? What's it do?
Its a wax and oil mix that has a fine food safe grit in it. I use it as a polishing step before i put my final wax on it.
Are you left handed? Or is it normal for the right hand to be closest to the work?
I am left handed but switch back and forth. I always suggest using the hand that feels most comfortable. There is no right or wrong hand closest.
❤👍🏻
I enjoyed watching. I'm just starting out with turnings.😊, Is there a way to subscribe?
Thanks for watching you can subscribe with this link. ua-cam.com/channels/MQQWUnkbcKridN_te_DbPg.html
Why didn’t you round off the outside first
Let's see you do that without a chuck....then I'll say you're a good turner🙂
Could you make a video without the boring background noise
Why do you think you have to do that anyway, it adds nothing and frankly it sucks
I'm out of here
Why
Well to start with this guy is over explaining like crazy, when I was 12 my shop teacher said half as much, the bowl blank was easily near 10” and he was going to make a 6” bowl, extreme waste , and hand holding a divider to mark a mortice ? The bowl is running out of true while he's doing the mortice that means the bowl wasn't secure on the worm screw( it happens but just leave it, no need to correct a few thou when you flip it, but it's unsecured on the screw) And that's just off the top of my head and I am an amateur. This guy has no business instructing anyone
Sure…
I’m going to have to disagree on just about “all” you claimed
What is sanding paste, and where does one purchase if they chose to use that?
Looks nice!