MadModder
Gallery, Projects and General => Gallery => Topic started by: chipenter on June 21, 2014, 09:50:25 AM
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I watched a demo of ornamental turning at Sandown Park model engineering show last year , I liked the look of it but the lathes are out of my budget , had a go with a rotary table and some router cutters and a fly mill , this is a first attempt .
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Jeff,
Looks excellent - well done.
I guess this took a long time. Did you have to lift the cutter, index the rotary table, drop the cutter etc etc?
Another thing to try on my CNC I think.
Phil
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Indexed every 5 degrees it's a mill drill set the depth and pull the handel gives me another 1.5 mm , the sides just used the y axsis and my DRO , the clearing up took longer than making the bowl the sawdust floated every where .
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Cool, Jeff! :thumbup: :clap:
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Really good Jeff.
As to the dust getting everywhere, well they are called "FLY" cutters :lol: Not sure the real reason for the name but today I was cleaning up some brass with said cutter and spent more than a few minutes with the vac tryhing to clean the shop AND myself before coming inside.
John B
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Jeff is that a router bit with a pilot that you used?
I was also wondering about burning since mill cranks move things slowly by comparison with a router in hand -- but quickly realized that a mill wouldn't run anywhere near the RPM of a router, so probably burning wouldn't be an issue?
Definitely cool!
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:D Got my interest at the title straight off.
I spent a few years with the Ornamental Turners Group of Australia OTGA for short saw them at the Sydney Wood show in 2005 joined up 2 years latter. Totally enjoy it, have yet to build my Rose Engine not expensive to build at all. Similar to this.
(http://www.otga.org.au/GalleryEquip2_files/Rose1.jpg)
Mind you I couldn't afford an OT lathe
http://www.ebay.com/sch/sis.html?_kw=Antique+Holtzapffel+Ornamental+Turning+Lathe+1860s
Love the cuts you have done I count 3 different types. ??
What was the wood?
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The wood was an off cut from an Oak kitchen worktop , I have an idea for a Rose head for the mill on slides but it's just a sketch at the moment , I missed the bottom photo on the first post , definetly tacktile .
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Oak well thats interesting.
Close grained timbers are usually better although I have used for demo purpose at shows what ever is available including Douglas Fur/Oregon even radiata pine for test cuts.
Old Biker Mark built this unit http://myweb.tiscali.co.uk/remark/pages/hobbies/ornamental/ornamental.html
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Hi Ray , thanks for posting the link , very interesting and the items made look very impressive. Type of thing I woukd like to have a go at I the future.............. once my to do list is done :palm:
cheers Mick
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Hi Ray , thanks for posting the link , very interesting and the items made look very impressive. Type of thing I woukd like to have a go at I the future.............. once my to do list is done :palm:
cheers Mick
Mick I know what you mean thats why my Rose Engine isn't built yet along with new ideas which come into making it either from me or others :Doh:
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last Christmas My wife asked if I could come up with some sort of Candlestick for her women's club dinner , the Dinner was on the 21st , she asked on the 19th :doh: This is what I came up with , made from 1" hot roll stock , I spent a few hours on this with a few different tools and very little imagination . A constant reminder of the number of things one can find to do , in a pinch ...... :D
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:thumbup:
Almost looks like glass
Yes I know the feeling.........dear can you fix,turn, make blah blah blah by Friday.........and its Wednesday night. :coffee:
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Wednesday night ....................... its normally Friday morning in my case lol :bugeye: :lol:
Cheers Mick