Does anyone else dread adjusting their tool rest every time they switch tools? I've been on the hunt for an HSS tool line (not carbide) that solves this problem.
What I'm looking for is a brand where every tool in the lineup puts the cutting tip at the same center height when held parallel to the centerline — so once your rest is set, it stays set. No more fussing between tools.
No dread. No chance of leaving the rest in one spot, at least with the tools I use and the way I turn. I'm constantly adjusting the rest height depending on several factors such as tool shaft diameter, type of tool, the grind, the piece I'm turning, and even how that piece of wood is responding to the cutting edge. Fine tool control demands it, in my opinion.
I make many small adjustments but but each with a reason - for the cut I want and feedback from the too presentation and preceding cut. It's not on automatic, but follows years of experimentation and refinement.
Big thing missing - what type of tools are you using and what kind of turnings. All bowls? Bowls, boxes, spindles, platter, finials, finger tops, material (wood, acrylic, aluminum)?
And I don't understand this: "puts the cutting tip at the same center height when held parallel to the centerline". With few exceptions I almost never hold a tool parallel to the rotational center of the piece. Maybe a scraper, box scraper, NRS, a flat-topped carbide tool (if I hadn't given them all away). Rarely if ever with a skew, spindle gouge, Hunter tool, etc. Maybe provide more info. Those who primarily turn the same types and sizes of things may have different requirements.
make the tool rest move easy and stay where you put it. The problem is usually when you move the tool rest it drops to low or moves too high and there is a fiddle factor.
I have zero problem with this. As I described in another thread, before loosening the locking lever I pinch the tool rest shaft between my left thumb and forefinger, both resting right where the tool rest shaft enters the banjo. This both prevents the tool rest from accidentally dropping, and allows me to make micro or medium height adjustments up and down simply by twisting my fingers a bit. I think I'll should add this to my next demo since it works so well and maybe there are some who haven't tried this method.
My "pinch" method also lets me rotate the tool rest to better fit parts of the piece without risking raising or lowering the rest by accident. I've been using this method for as long as I can remember.
From other discussion, for evaluation I bought one of those threaded collars that fastens to the rest shaft with set screws and has threads for little adjustments up or down. My evaluation: a waste of money. It only allows a limited movement and more needs adjustment of the set screws. I'll prob take it to the next demo too and show what I don't like about it.
My dream is a sturdy electronic tool rest adjuster that will advance up or down in user-defined increments, perhaps of 1/2mm or so.