My niece and grand nephew fervently wanted a chess set turned from a felled tree on their lot and I foolishly said, "I'll show you how to do it, but won't do it for you". Well, I have given up on tutoring the fine art of using a spindle and detail gouge. I membered my Dad's frustration with me and a skew as a young lad ,and so, as he did I retreated to scrapers. As a card holding member of the "Just one more tool away from greatness" club I concluded that I had no negative rake scrapers of merit other than skews. So, I went looking for M42 square fly cutters. They only ones I found came in lengths of 4" or less, but a bought a 5 pack. I didn't like the hardware to mount them into a handle and so downgraded to M2 square bar. Cart before the horse, I looked into tempering. Now I know why woodturning tool companies charge what they do, when the raw blanks are real cheap.
Now the question: Before I turn a bunch of handles, should I just buy some high carbon steel and make scrapers and harden them, or will unhardened M2 or M42 be superior? Understand the drill. While sitting on a stool: Handle higher/lower, tool rest higher/lower, cut down hill - etc. We are not talking production turning here and time at the grinder only subtracts from my stool time. However, I like adding to my collection quality tools and so when the chess set is finished I would like to have something that I could really use.
Your advice, please
Now the question: Before I turn a bunch of handles, should I just buy some high carbon steel and make scrapers and harden them, or will unhardened M2 or M42 be superior? Understand the drill. While sitting on a stool: Handle higher/lower, tool rest higher/lower, cut down hill - etc. We are not talking production turning here and time at the grinder only subtracts from my stool time. However, I like adding to my collection quality tools and so when the chess set is finished I would like to have something that I could really use.
Your advice, please