I didn't have the heart to take it off the shelf... tomorrow morning.Ouch it hurts to see that.
I've always had heat but I just installed AC in the shop over the weekend so summer heat won't be a concern going forward. The room in which my bowls get shelved is a little more humid than the rest of the shop so I guess that's a good thing at least.No it simply dried too fast. Find a better way to store them away from heat and air movement. Put more sealer on the end grain.
I just rough turned this a couple of weeks ago. I guess i left too much material.
It's temperature, humidity, air flow, type of wood grain, when the wood was harvested, and how long ago the wood was harvested all add to the failure. There is always a chance of explosions. I never twice turn when the grain comes over the top that much. If that was even just slightly thinner on the top and thicker on the bottom, the chances of cracking is very good. Do you not put the rough turned vessel in a paper bag? I put mine in a yard waste bag because they are double thickness. It makes no difference how your method worked in the past, this one is the problem.I've always had heat but I just installed AC in the shop over the weekend so summer heat won't be a concern going forward. The room in which my bowls get shelved is a little more humid than the rest of the shop so I guess that's a good thing at least.
Wall thickness has nothing to do with it? It's sister bowl sits on the shelf above and is intact so far. I turned that one a little thinner.
It's temperature, humidity, air flow, type of wood grain, when the wood was harvested, and how long ago the wood was harvested all add to the failure. There is always a chance of explosions. I never twice turn when the grain comes over the top that much. If that was even just slightly thinner on the top and thicker on the bottom, the chances of cracking is very good. Do you not put the rough turned vessel in a paper bag? I put mine in a yard waste bag because they are double thickness. It makes no difference how your method worked in the past, this one is the problem.
...The bowl would definitely need to be turned thinner though, any chance of it "exploding" at this stage?
The wall looks thick enough and the crack small enough that it should stay together, even if you want to refine the outside first. I'm guessing from the photo that crack doesn't go all the way to the inside so there may be plenty of good wood beneath. (probe with a fine wire?) Perhaps the crack could be turned away with a bit of compromise on the form. Of course, wear protection as always, stay out of the line of fire.
A friend here has turned large bowls that had so many natural voids they would certainly have self destructed if turned as normal. His method was to turn the outside, then wrap with overlapping layers of strapping tape, the incredibly strong type with embedded fiberglass filaments to give a high tensile strength. The tape would keep the piece together while he turned the inside. to relatively thin walls. The pieces I saw would certainly have self destructed without the outside reinforcement. I've heard of people wrapping the outside with layers the tape that furniture movers use, like tensilized polypropyline that stretches to a limit, then sticks to itself, almost impossible to tear. I use a roll about 3" wide to secure things like bundles of wood.
JKJ
This is a great group for ideas and free help. But if all attempts don't yield acceptable results, pewa practice![]()
I might try this. Unfortunately though, the crack went all the way through. My initial thought was put it on the lathe and turn it thin but it had split all the way through.
Check out the Videos andFAQ section of bigislandengraving.comNot the worst idea at all and I've never done a butterfly in a bowl before. I guess I would need to make a jig - any good examples?
I’ve been using the bag method for 8-10 years. Tried various sealers, too time consuming and messy, and not an option for 1 turn items, which I do a lot of.Richard, I've never used a paper bag, no. Can you tell me how that works? How long does it go into the bag, do you also include shavings? That sort of thing...
I will give this a shot. Thanks for the input.Bag it next time.
Tim