I have struggled for a long time trying to reduce sanding time by getting a fair curve and clean cut with a gouge on bowls and hollow forms. I could generally get a tearout free surface but there were always stutters in the curve that required scraping to smooth out and then excessive sanding as the scraped cut rarely was as clean as it should be. I took some lessons from local turners Tom Dunne and Alan Stirt which helped and at least showed what was possible but had a hard time reproducing those results on my own. Covid time has not exactly been conducive to mentoring sessions either.
After being laid up all winter I have been woodshedding for a week, finish turning a pile of dry roughed out bowl blanks. Nothing spectacular, cherry, yellow birch and hard maple from 5"-11" diameter, decent turning woods and cheap enough to waste if they don't turn out right. I've blown up several that got too thin as I recut repeatedly. I'm not sure what changed, but in the past few days I made a breakthrough. This morning I turned the exterior of a simple 7" maple bowl that I can easily sand with 220#. I'm sure that doesn't impress most experienced turners, but it is very satisfying. Floating the bevel, not forcing the tool, using torso movement to guide the gouge in a flowing movement are all just words until it actually happens. Maybe this is what Odie means by "spiritual turning".
I am mainly using a 40-40 ground v shaped gouge and push cutting, but I can get equivalent results with my Ellsworth grind as well, and I use that on the inside of deeper forms when the other won't reach. I still can't get as clean a result as I would like with a pull cut.
It helped that I set up the outboard bed on my fixed headstock General 260. I have had the bed all along but didn't have any way to use the 1 1/8"-8 left hand spindle thread. Getting adapters for several of my chucks along with flat jaws and a making a set of wood jaw extensions made it possible to hold the blanks with a rabbet cut on the inside and make an unobstructed push cut. Being able to address the piece from the end of the lathe and tuck the tool handle into my side is a lot easier on my wonky shoulder.![DSC_0809[1].JPG DSC_0809[1].JPG](https://www.aawforum.org/community/data/attachments/41/41753-30efa8840d7c0d9042180b1e005e814b.jpg?hash=MO-ohA18DZ)
![DSC_0808[1].JPG DSC_0808[1].JPG](https://www.aawforum.org/community/data/attachments/41/41754-61f5d7bb182ac50322a918029c2a28d1.jpg?hash=YfXXuxgqxQ)
After being laid up all winter I have been woodshedding for a week, finish turning a pile of dry roughed out bowl blanks. Nothing spectacular, cherry, yellow birch and hard maple from 5"-11" diameter, decent turning woods and cheap enough to waste if they don't turn out right. I've blown up several that got too thin as I recut repeatedly. I'm not sure what changed, but in the past few days I made a breakthrough. This morning I turned the exterior of a simple 7" maple bowl that I can easily sand with 220#. I'm sure that doesn't impress most experienced turners, but it is very satisfying. Floating the bevel, not forcing the tool, using torso movement to guide the gouge in a flowing movement are all just words until it actually happens. Maybe this is what Odie means by "spiritual turning".
I am mainly using a 40-40 ground v shaped gouge and push cutting, but I can get equivalent results with my Ellsworth grind as well, and I use that on the inside of deeper forms when the other won't reach. I still can't get as clean a result as I would like with a pull cut.
It helped that I set up the outboard bed on my fixed headstock General 260. I have had the bed all along but didn't have any way to use the 1 1/8"-8 left hand spindle thread. Getting adapters for several of my chucks along with flat jaws and a making a set of wood jaw extensions made it possible to hold the blanks with a rabbet cut on the inside and make an unobstructed push cut. Being able to address the piece from the end of the lathe and tuck the tool handle into my side is a lot easier on my wonky shoulder.
![DSC_0809[1].JPG DSC_0809[1].JPG](https://www.aawforum.org/community/data/attachments/41/41753-30efa8840d7c0d9042180b1e005e814b.jpg?hash=MO-ohA18DZ)
![DSC_0808[1].JPG DSC_0808[1].JPG](https://www.aawforum.org/community/data/attachments/41/41754-61f5d7bb182ac50322a918029c2a28d1.jpg?hash=YfXXuxgqxQ)