My Oneway faceplates will only allow me to use a #10 metal screw What length should I be using?
May I respectfully suggest you contact the manufacture before altering the faceplate. Making alterations may void the warranty.I would suggest boring out the faceplate holes to accept #12 or #14 screws. The length will depend on the work you are mounting.
Dangerous! Drywall screws are very brittle.Wow I have been doing it all wrong. I have been using 1-1/4” drywall screws.
Correct! If the faceplate holes are countersunk I use oval head Phillips for sheetmetal, if not countersunk hex head sheetmetal screws (less likely to strip out). Torx head deck screws work well.Dangerous! Drywall screws are very brittle.
This is correct but not a practical consideration. With a good faceplate Mount 1.25 screws will hold just fine.If the faceplate is going on what later is the top of the bowl, then creating a tenon or mortise, reversing the piece and hollowing, the hollowing is removing where the screw holes were, correct? So longer screws are more secure and as long as they don’t impact the hollowing,
Screws don’t hold well in endgrain. Here is where you may want the 5” lag screws.He recommends longer than 1 1/4 inch for end grain, largest diameter that is practical, avoiding fine thread screws, not over tightening, CA glue in screw holes on occasion, and a large faceplate.
The first thing I do to a new faceplate is countersink the holes on the face so the dimple expands into that recess when the screw is tightened.Incidentally, some people countersink the screw holes on the face to accommodate the raised bits of wood when a pilot hole is not drilled first.
Faceplates have warranties??May I respectfully suggest you contact the manufacture before altering the faceplate. Making alterations may void the warranty.
not sure which one: https://spax.us/productsSpax torx head screws
For your axminster faceplate ring you want a #9 countersunk (4.5mm). This is what axminster told me after I emailed them. #10 you can see just a little light between the screw and the chuck preventing it from registering correctly. I use the spax on mine after I figured out that like someone else said, the phillips head I found most places kept stripping out.not sure which one: https://spax.us/products
The ones I have are the SPAX® T-STAR plus Flat Head fasteners with HCR-Xnot sure which one: https://spax.us/products
I’ve never done that, lol!!A school district some distance away shut down their industrial arts program because it was too expensive, not pertinent in this age, and the machines are dangerous. I went to the school auction where they sold off all these dangerous machines and bought a couple of lathes with lots of accessories. This was one of them, where was the teacher?
Just for your amusement but they were all 1-1/4" so good to go!View attachment 55051
What diameter and length? I am always on the lookout for #14 or #12, 1-1/4 or 1/1/2, and although Spax makes them, I don't see them in the big box stores except for much longer lengths. Amazon has them but they sell five-box lots for $80, nothing smaller. Where did you find yours?I like Spax torx head screws. I've never broken, bent, or stripped one; the only time they get replaced is when one mysteriously disappears. (When I find the hundreds of lost pencils in my shop I'll probably also find a stash of missing screws) The current set has probably done 50-60 bowls, many starting with 20-25" log sections. I've never pre-drilled a hole, I put them in with an impact driver.
I saw some of those giant pieces you turn. Wow. How long are the screws you used to attach to the faceplate?I've never had a piece come off
I’m fairly new at this so forgive the neophyte questions. I don’t fully understand your setup. I’ve used a faceplate on what is to be the vessel top, turned a tenon on bottom, and shaped vessel, then flipped it around to grip by tenon while hollowing.Apologies for the pedantic answer:
ASSUMING A RADIAL (FACE-GRAIN) TURNING:
Cantilevering a big piece can't be taken lightly - I hear they hurt when flying off
- I start all pieces between centers with a 1.5" spur drive in a shallow 1.5" Forstner hole - only when achieving "gallery ready" shape do I put it on the faceplate - I stay between centers for final rounding
- 1.25" on the six inside holes and, if the tenon is too short, 1" on the twelve outside holes. If tenon length allows, 1.25" in all eighteen - I try for a 1" tenon length
- The reason for the shorter screws in a short tenon is: My base is typically 3" to 3.5" - to do that with a 6" faceplate means you have to "dive under" (see pics) - want to avoid a circle of screw holes
- Oneway 6" is all I use - it takes a #14
- SS sheet metal oval head, a #3 drill insert and #3 big hand-held for final tightening
- Holes are drilled with 11/64 with a drill stop - starter holes are done with a cabinet bit
- The tenon must be dead-nuts flat or maybe a teeny concave
ASSUMING AN AXIAL TURNING (typically a tall vase design): I use a chuck and a big steady rest - no need for a faceplate
I’m fairly new at this so forgive the neophyte questions. I don’t fully understand your setup. I’ve used a faceplate on what is to be the vessel top, turned a tenon on bottom, and shaped vessel, then flipped it around to grip by tenon while hollowing.
It looks like you are placing a faceplate directly on your tenon. How then did you grip the vessel to create the tenon (between centers?) and why place the faceplate through the tenon?
so basically one “wastes” an inch or so of the blank (a little more than screw length) in order to create a tenon into which the faceplate is screwed, later turning off that tenon when the bottom of the piece is turned—and the tenon is not used to mount the piece in a four jaw chuck. Is that correct?
I have only used the tenon to be gripped by a chuck, never saw it used to hold a faceplate. I liked keeping the nub to fit inside the spindle. Nice video. Thanks.