I hope that you did not get hurt. Was that a tenon or expansion?Well, that was "unexpected". A nice chunk of padauk wasted. No cracks, and it still flew apart.
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I have seen a few bowls where they have another type of wood segmented between two halves of the bowl. You could run both halves over a planner or sander and get them flat and glue a 1" thick flat board in-between the halves and finish turning the bowl. You can make several additional cuts at odd angles and glue different thicknesses of boards in-between the halves and have a multi-segmented bowl with different accent types of wood running through the piece at different angles.
I don't see any marks that look like you had a catch. Some times there are existing cracks that are invisible if you don't have a trained eye. Some times there are existing cracks that you can't see even if you have a trained eye. I always stand out of the line of fire....
robo hippy
Maybe not a catch, per se, but from what I can see, the OP was being extremely hard on the bowl. Just got to be an incredible amount of stress to split it like that, and the evidence shown by the very jagged tool marks are indicating exactly this.
-----odie-----
Photos are deceiving,but it looks like a predrilled (2" ?) center hole with a forstner bit. Looks too deep from view angle. The depth of the hole, plus any kind of inadvertent pressure, could have weakened the wood enough to cause the fracture which is right on the edge (as seen in top photo at 6:00) of the drilled-out hole.
It was my traditional round nose scraper; it caught and the bowl came out of the chuck, flew up and when it hit the floor; that's when it broke in half. Now I'm pretty sure if I would have made the mortise a bit deeper, that wouldn't have happened.I don't see any marks that look like you had a catch. Some times there are existing cracks that are invisible if you don't have a trained eye. Some times there are existing cracks that you can't see even if you have a trained eye. I always stand out of the line of fire....
robo hippy
It was my traditional round nose scraper; it caught and the bowl came out of the chuck, flew up and when it hit the floor; that's when it broke in half. Now I'm pretty sure if I would have made the mortise a bit deeper, that wouldn't have happened.
It was my traditional round nose scraper; it caught and the bowl came out of the chuck, flew up and when it hit the floor; that's when it broke in half. Now I'm pretty sure if I would have made the mortise a bit deeper, that wouldn't have happened.
you can remove stock pretty fast with a gouge, but not quite as fast as a heavy duty scraper using a plunge cut technique..
Odie, I think your analysis is spot on. I was thinking basically the same thing. From the way that the wood fibers appear to be torn I was thinking that the bowl gouge or whatever tool was being used as a scraper and probably also was dull. This then led to a lot of force being used in order for the tool to cut.
I also agree with Greg Norman's assessment.
I believe that what appears to be a missing chunk in the picture below might be the catch that you are talking about.
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this is maybe true - maybe false.
whether you can work faster with a gouge or a scraper depends on many factors
The grind on your gouge, your skill with the gouge, your skill with the scraper, the size of the bowl You are turning and the type of wood you are turning.
Smaller shallow bowls are easy to do with a scraper. Larger deeper bowls more difficult to do with a scraper.
I wouldn’t even try to use a scraper on a natural edge bowl.
Most of the production bowl turners today use a sideground gouge. Production speed drives their choices of tools. If they could make more bowls using as scraper they would.
Definitely! Just wait until the chuck comes off! I check the set screws on the adapter and the chuck a few times during turning.One more thing to remember, wood is compressible so check the chuck several times after you mount it for any sign of looseness. Ive had work that had to be retightened four or five times while working on it due to that fact.
Or hop on I5 and go have a lesson with Reed. (Robo Hippy) OK, it's a 4 hour drive, but nearly impossible to get lost. In a half day, you would learn 2 years worth of figuring it out on your own!3. It takes a lot of skill to use a scraper to hollow bowls. If you want to learn to use scrapers, Watch Reed Gray’s videos.