Steve Wohlgemuth
Member
Fellow pent turners, as some of you may recall about three years ago I embarked on a scientific journey to come up with answers about the best way to finish a pen. At that time I sent out questionnaires on many websites and Facebook groups and overwhelmingly the most important quality people were striving for was a shiny scratch free surface. With that in mind I proceeded to do a controlled experiment where I changed one variable at a time such as sanding, grits, horizontal sanding, buffing, CA over resins, as well as a variety of other steps. I've been fortunate enough to present my findings at the Midwest Penners Gathering, the mid Atlantic Turners Expo, and the Mid Ohio Valley Pen Turners Gathering. I recently had the good fortune to spend some time at SWAT with Kurt Herzog one of the pioneers in the field . He was very supportive of my efforts which is leading to my continue my journey. One of the things that has gotten in the way of my work has been less than ideal micro photographs, but I've been able to to some gain access to some much higher quality digital stereomicroscopes at a local university. With this I'll be able to capture much clearer and conclusive images. To that end I'm asking my fellow pen turners to let me know what they would like to be evaluated. Although I'm certainly interested in one product versus another, I am more interested in conceptual items such as wet vs dry sanding, sanding, speeds, polishing, micro crystalline waxes versus sandpaper, etc., etc. So please let me know what things you think are critical to achieving as a shiny scratch free a surface as possible. Please don't opine about the merits of a natural feeling, matte finish versus a glossy finish. That is totally a subjective opinion and cannot be tested. Thank you in advance for your input. Mark Dreyer and John Underhill have once again been kind enough to give me some time at the Midwest Pen Turner's Gathering this spring to present my results and my ultimate goal is to get this published in one of our journals.