larydactyl
Member
My only experience with a wood lathe is making an ash tray in the high school shop back in 1964.
I have ended up with an old Rockwell lathe which was left in the garage by the previous owner. It came complete with no accessories other than a dead cup center and a sanding disc. Not even a tool rest for the banjo. But I have finally gotten around to getting it up and running and I think it is in fairly good shape even if it is missing many of the modern features such as variable speed, but it is American made of heavy cast iron and does have the jack shaft for more speed choices at least. The bearings are good, the tailstock lines up with the headstock, and it is made of heavy cast iron in the USA. I think it is at least as good as any lathe that I could afford to buy new.
Back when I had a metal lathe 30 or so years ago, my favorite use of it was to turn a totally random bit of aluminum or steel (uaually stepped, tapered and grooved to make it look important). When I would catch a technician with a bunch of parts scattered around his workbench from a part he had disassembled I wold drop that random bit i had turned in with all the parts he needed. I would give them plenty of time to try to figure out where that part went in the assembly.
So I am obviously not a pen turner, or turner of any kind at this time. But that could change. I've always wanted to make pens but never felt that it would be worth the expense of acquiring the tooling to do so. The "free" lathe changed that.
I'm still in the process of tooling up and have yet to turn my first pen. I'm looking forward to learning from this group.
I have ended up with an old Rockwell lathe which was left in the garage by the previous owner. It came complete with no accessories other than a dead cup center and a sanding disc. Not even a tool rest for the banjo. But I have finally gotten around to getting it up and running and I think it is in fairly good shape even if it is missing many of the modern features such as variable speed, but it is American made of heavy cast iron and does have the jack shaft for more speed choices at least. The bearings are good, the tailstock lines up with the headstock, and it is made of heavy cast iron in the USA. I think it is at least as good as any lathe that I could afford to buy new.
Back when I had a metal lathe 30 or so years ago, my favorite use of it was to turn a totally random bit of aluminum or steel (uaually stepped, tapered and grooved to make it look important). When I would catch a technician with a bunch of parts scattered around his workbench from a part he had disassembled I wold drop that random bit i had turned in with all the parts he needed. I would give them plenty of time to try to figure out where that part went in the assembly.
So I am obviously not a pen turner, or turner of any kind at this time. But that could change. I've always wanted to make pens but never felt that it would be worth the expense of acquiring the tooling to do so. The "free" lathe changed that.
I'm still in the process of tooling up and have yet to turn my first pen. I'm looking forward to learning from this group.