Well, after seeing some of the others' ball-turning attachments, I decided the I just HAD to do one myself! It's a variation on Steve Bedair's design, modified to suit the materials I could get my hands on (or had "in stock"), and requiring the absolute minimum of milling (as I don't have a mill, a milling attachment, or access to a mill).
The main base and "puck" are made out of 6061 aluminum (because that's what I had), a Saab clutch throw-out bearing (also, because that's what I had) between the base and the puck, and a PTFE bearing under the head of the stainless socket-head bolt that holds the two parts together (I had some PTFE, so I turned a small bearing - worked great!). Underneath is the conical insert (also aluminum, and threaded so that it acts as a jam nut to keep the center bolt from turning out) that fits into the cross slide - it's an exact duplicate of the cone on the underside of the compound, and seems to hold the ball turner down solidly. The handle shaft is a piece of spring-tempered stainless steel (you guessed it - I had it in stock), and the handle itself was the first ball-turning job for the tool. It worked well, as you can see. The reason the knob is the shape it is is because I also wanted to try taper turning, internal threading, etc., and this shape required several different turning techniques. The whole thing needs cleaning up and polishing, but it's in working condition now.
One issue I had was how to attach a cutting tip to the thing. I've seen various techniques, many of which required milling. So, since I had a spare 3/8"-square-shank cutter with indexable carbide tip, I decided to use that. However, cutting a square hole for it to slide into wasn't in the cards, so I turned the square shank down to 1/4" round, and drilled & reamed a hole for it to slide into. The beauty of it is that I can reverse it for cutting concaves by just loosening the socket head bolt on top, removing the cutter, and sliding it back in from the other side.
Anyway, it's really not much of a project compared to the incredible work I've seen on this website, but as my very first machining build, I'm quite pleased. It looks okay, but most importantly it works!! Well, we all have to start somewhere!