I am turning a handle for a bottle opener using a Castelo Boxwood blank. I am getting light rings during sanding. There are no gouge marks. How can these rings be removed?
A photo would help immensely. What is your sanding sequence (grits, etc.)?I am turning a handle for a bottle opener using a Castelo Boxwood blank. I am getting light rings during sanding. There are no gouge marks. How can these rings be removed?
I will go back to 180 tomorrow and then up the grit. The wood is Castelo Boxwood which has an unusual grain pattern. First time turning this wood.120 to 220 is a pretty big jump unless the wood is real soft. If I start with 120 I usually do a few seconds of 150 or 180 before jumping to 220
Problem fixed. Marks were burnishing from spindle gouge. Sharpened and made another pass and marks gone. Thanks for all your suggestions. My normal process is to step from 120 (or 180 if no tool marks). But, there were no tool marks. So, I decided to skip a step---never a good thing. Thanks for all the suggestions.General rule of thumb with sanding is to progress no more than 50% higher each subsequent grit. So, according to this rule, if you start at 120, then go to 180 after, and then higher grits. It’s helpful to think of sanding as scratching the wood. The job of higher grits is to reduce the size of the scratches, until ultimately they are invisible.
And, like other folks say, with spindle turnings it’s very helpful if you sand lengthwise between/after grits.
I generally think of burnish marks, or ‘bruising’ the wood as associated with the transition point on the inside of bowls (maple is especially prone). Solutions for this include grinding the heal of the gouge, and ‘floating’the bevel (not ‘riding’). I always grind the heals of my bowl gouges severely to leave a short bevel and then rounded heal.Problem fixed. Marks were burnishing from spindle gouge.