I will soon be taking a path to the world of basket illusions and would appreciate your recommendations for bench top smoke evacuators including the types of filters you use. Thank you.
Ditto!I don't use any, but then I'm not burning wood, I'm coloring it with heat. At best, I get little whiffs of odor. Basket illusions are meant to be just that, illusions that mimic woven baskets. They don't have dark black lines between the strands of reed used for weaving.
To paraphrase a comment from Bill Boehme, if you are sending out smoke signals, you might want to turn down the heat a little bit.
Amazon search: Fume & Smoke ExtractorsI will soon be taking a path to the world of basket illusions and would appreciate your recommendations for bench top smoke evacuators including the types of filters you use. Thank you.
To paraphrase Graeme Priddle, if the wood isn't squeaking, you are wasting your time. To get a hard black burned line, you have to make smoke.I don't use any, but then I'm not burning wood, I'm coloring it with heat. At best, I get little whiffs of odor. Basket illusions are meant to be just that, illusions that mimic woven baskets. They don't have dark black lines between the strands of reed used for weaving.
To paraphrase a comment from Bill Boehme, if you are sending out smoke signals, you might want to turn down the heat a little bit.
Just as I start typing, Roger says it for me!A small dust collector blower or other inline blower with a 4" flex pipe that can be positioned near the work and vented outside (use this on a laser cutter I set up), or an enclosed hood with a kitchen hood above, again venting outside. 3-400 cfm should be plenty if the back and sides are enclosed. Use a smoke candle to test whether the flows are sufficient.
Air flow is air flow. If sucking or blowing moves the same amount of air over the work it could affect the tip temperature.I use a small fan to "suck" the smoke and fumes away. Anything that blows directly on what you are burning will cool the tip of the pen and cause problems.
Actually it is quite a bit different, give it a try and you will see what I mean.Air flow is air flow. If sucking or blowing moves the same amount of air over the work it could affect the tip temperature.
I'm glad you mentioned the Keh's cup cutters. I got a set recently and I can't make then cut very well unless I up the speed and then they burn more than cut. I'm glad to hear that might just be what they're supposed to do.I use a muffin fan that I aim past the piece so it doesn't cool the burning tip. Then I have a dust collector on the other side to pick up the smoke from the fan. This is extremely important when I'm using the Kehys cup cutters. They produce a huge amount smoke.
Curt, you need to sharpen the outside edges of the cutters. If your cutter edges are flat on the top, they won’t work. Understand, that these were never originally designed for wood, but for rounding the ends of wire. That’s why the interior of the cups have ‘cutters’. You can use diamond stones, or sandpaper. Putting them on a grinder will take too much off, too fast.I'm glad you mentioned the Keh's cup cutters. I got a set recently and I can't make then cut very well unless I up the speed and then they burn more than cut. I'm glad to hear that might just be what they're supposed to do.
Thanks Donna! I'll give that a try.Curt, you need to sharpen the outside edges of the cutters. If your cutter edges are flat on the top, they won’t work. Understand, that these were never originally designed for wood, but for rounding the ends of wire. That’s why the interior of the cups have ‘cutters’. You can use diamond stones, or sandpaper. Putting them on a grinder will take too much off, too fast.
exactly! I bought a 12x12" air filter with a high mpr rating, built a stand for it and a small desk fan Positioning the fan so it blows smoke away from the work piece into the filter. works great.I use a small fan to "suck" the smoke and fumes away. Anything that blows directly on what you are burning will cool the tip of the pen and cause problems.
Those 'cute' little cutting edges on a new cup cutter last about two seconds in wood - then it's all friction and SMOKE !!! ... and high speed is helpful for control but that makes even more smoke. Mike told me many years ago to thin the outer edge (diameter) of the cutter. Maybe I misunderstood him, but I have been doing this by mounting the cutter in my micromotor (on slow speed) and holding the side parallel to the CBN wheel and lightly and carefully grinding away some metal until the edge is much thinner.I'm glad you mentioned the Keh's cup cutters. I got a set recently and I can't make then cut very well unless I up the speed and then they burn more than cut. I'm glad to hear that might just be what they're supposed to do.
Try to enter the cut at a slight angle and then immediately straighten the tool to get a perpendicular entry. This eliminates the tendency for the cutter to run - especially if you thin the edge as mentioned above.The cutters work best when hot. When I put a fresh cutter in my Dremel I run at high speed. I make three or four burns in scrap wood to heat the cutter up. Then it doesn't try to walk as bad when you start the cut (burn). I did sharpen the edge but it didn't seem to make much difference. Oh and when you finished dont try to remove tge cutter with your fingers. Only takes once to figure that out.
That would be ideal, Hugh.Put a chair out on the front porch of your shop and only burn when there is a breeze. With your back to the wind, all gets blown away from you. I do this with dust from carving with a microcarver also.