I'm thinking of turning a Staunton pattern chess set.
I'm a newbie with limited experience but once successfully turned a replacement pawn in rosewood for a nice commercial set I have that lost one in a house fire many years ago. At the time I was a finish engineer for Dremel and was given a prototype of the then-new 700 series micro lathe. Mine is in a matte black bake enamel that we decided was an unnecessary cost-adder. The product went to market in an as-molded, unpainted shiny black.
I remember my two difficulties were finding a chunk of rosewood which matched the existing set (Carlton's Rare Woods and Veneers, circa 1980), and in holding the work during the process. Oh, and the provided tools were not good - cheap steel, and handles are too short (about 2"). The lathe did work, and still does, but it's a single speed and not that easy to use.
I also have now a recently refurbished Rockwell 46-111 (was my granddad's) which only has a spur drive and a dead center. It's MT2 on both ends, so I can upgrade without issue.
So - a live center and a chuck or two, and a good set of miniature tools seems like a jumping off point. I'm thinking the Axminster SK100 or SK114 chuck kits, and either the Axminster Multi-head live center or one of their steb centers. Alternatively, the Record SC2 is attractive as it would give me a lot of clearance to do the close-in work. That said, it would be pretty useless after making a set or sets. I'm not a pen maker. I've looked at the Taylor and Axminster miniature tools and know I don't know enough to make a choice about the tools.
I'm lucky enough to have a good-sized block of rosewood which I know my grandfather acquired in the early 70's, and a piece of maple of the same vintage. I know to be really careful with rosewood dust, btw.
So the questions are - is working close to the jaws pretty easy on the SK110/114? Are the multiple heads on the live center worth having? Who makes good mini tools?
I'm a newbie with limited experience but once successfully turned a replacement pawn in rosewood for a nice commercial set I have that lost one in a house fire many years ago. At the time I was a finish engineer for Dremel and was given a prototype of the then-new 700 series micro lathe. Mine is in a matte black bake enamel that we decided was an unnecessary cost-adder. The product went to market in an as-molded, unpainted shiny black.
I remember my two difficulties were finding a chunk of rosewood which matched the existing set (Carlton's Rare Woods and Veneers, circa 1980), and in holding the work during the process. Oh, and the provided tools were not good - cheap steel, and handles are too short (about 2"). The lathe did work, and still does, but it's a single speed and not that easy to use.
I also have now a recently refurbished Rockwell 46-111 (was my granddad's) which only has a spur drive and a dead center. It's MT2 on both ends, so I can upgrade without issue.
So - a live center and a chuck or two, and a good set of miniature tools seems like a jumping off point. I'm thinking the Axminster SK100 or SK114 chuck kits, and either the Axminster Multi-head live center or one of their steb centers. Alternatively, the Record SC2 is attractive as it would give me a lot of clearance to do the close-in work. That said, it would be pretty useless after making a set or sets. I'm not a pen maker. I've looked at the Taylor and Axminster miniature tools and know I don't know enough to make a choice about the tools.
I'm lucky enough to have a good-sized block of rosewood which I know my grandfather acquired in the early 70's, and a piece of maple of the same vintage. I know to be really careful with rosewood dust, btw.
So the questions are - is working close to the jaws pretty easy on the SK110/114? Are the multiple heads on the live center worth having? Who makes good mini tools?