Odie
Panning for Montana gold, with Betsy, the mule!
Here it is, past 2:30am, and I'm just coming in from the shop! 
I was thinking about carving out bowl interiors, and while doing this on the lathe, you've got the worst possible vantage point for seeing how the interior is shaping up. It gets worse, as the bowl is spinning. For me, at least, it gets very difficult to get a smooth contoured surface, free of subtle differences that are unacceptable for a bowl's interior. This is the main reason I have never been able to eliminate power sanding on the interiors of my bowls. Over time, I have gotten better, but not good enough.
Some of you older turners might remember the "depth perception test" while taking high school driver ed training. This was an elongated box and you look through one end and try to align two toy cars at the other end, so the bumpers were even with one another. I can remember being ok with this test, but not the best.
Just wondering if there are any comments about depth perception.....and, how this may affect others' turnings.
-----odie-----

I was thinking about carving out bowl interiors, and while doing this on the lathe, you've got the worst possible vantage point for seeing how the interior is shaping up. It gets worse, as the bowl is spinning. For me, at least, it gets very difficult to get a smooth contoured surface, free of subtle differences that are unacceptable for a bowl's interior. This is the main reason I have never been able to eliminate power sanding on the interiors of my bowls. Over time, I have gotten better, but not good enough.
Some of you older turners might remember the "depth perception test" while taking high school driver ed training. This was an elongated box and you look through one end and try to align two toy cars at the other end, so the bumpers were even with one another. I can remember being ok with this test, but not the best.
Just wondering if there are any comments about depth perception.....and, how this may affect others' turnings.
-----odie-----