I'm in the market for a carving stand that will work with my lathe chuck, rather than a face-plate type. If you worked with either or both of these I'd appreciate some feedback on which would be the better buy for me. I'd mostly use it to embellish platters and bowls
I have now worked with either, but I have an opinion.
I considered the Bosch until I watched a video of him carving around a rim. Every time he rotated to the next position it took both hands to fumble, hold, and turn the thing since the single lever unlocked both the angle and the rotation.
After I saw the Best Wood Tools version in use by a well known turning genius I trust, I liked the two handles: one for the angle, and the other for the rotation. When working around the rim or even in the center of a bowl or platter it is far better (IMO) to keep the angle locked and rotating the piece axis independently. When sanding or otherwise working around the piece I often leave the rotation lever unlocked and rotate the piece by hand.
I've talked to others who have used both and far prefer the BWT. In fact, I like it so much I bought a second one when it was on sale for "just in case", as it just in case a second person in the shop is doing one thing while I'm doing another, or just in case a give it away in a weak moment, or just in case a grizzly bear breaks in and steals it.
The thing, like all of their other products I'm familiar with, is extremely well made. Comes with a mount to use it with a workbench but I just mounted it to block and hold it in the bench vise.
Refining surface with hand scraping.
Rotate, lock, sand. Repeat.
She's gently smoothing the surface of this piece with 600 grit on a pneumatic ROS.
Just my opinion, worth what you paid for it!
As with many things in life and woodturning, what you like to make and how you like to work makes all the difference.
PS, I see it's even cheaper now that when I bought the last one on sale. (Pick the right thread size for your chuck at the bottom.)
JKJ