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- May 16, 2005
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Forum after forum, over and over again, the topic of weight and balance keeps coming up. For those of you who have Giant bandsaws and macho lathes, not to mention a death wish if you insist on mounting roughs from the log on a spur center, peace. Enjoy your equipment, cut slow and keep out of the way.
For those with more normal equipment, I firmly believe that the second most important thing you can do to protect yourself and the equipment is to get the blank as close as you can to balance. Most important is to use something like the pin chuck, your scroll chuck in a recess, or even the woodworm to give you a more positive hold, and keep the tailstock in use until you're round. As the first pair of pictures indicates, there is a simple way available to help your case. Tilt your bandsaw table and take away most of what you're not going to use anyway. In this case over a pound and a half of unneeded and balance-destroying wood was removed in two places in less than a minute, without hurting the choice of final shape a bit.
Of course, there are a lot of times when you could make a much deeper piece, if only you had a bigger bandsaw. If that's the case, use what you have and a bit of patience to arrive at the same result. First, make a circle-cutting jig. Too simple and useful an item for what we do not to have one. Mine's based on a 1/4 inch thick piece of ply and a 1" diameter center because of the pin chuck. Yours may vary. The attached sheet shows a board of 7 1/4" working down to a circle on a 6" bandsaw. If you don't have a chainsaw, you can nibble over, nibble under, nibble center and so forth until you have the final picture, which is cutting to the diameter you need. If you have a chainsaw, no problem to rough the piece a bit oversize, undercutting with the idea of making the final cut as pictured. Keeps you from those annoying circumstances that happen when you try to make multiple tangent cuts with the chainsaw, only to find that one set of corners or more is chocking the whole against the ways.
I'm sure there are other ways out there, but I can't find many methods pictured other than mounting a log section. Shouldn't have to do that.
For those with more normal equipment, I firmly believe that the second most important thing you can do to protect yourself and the equipment is to get the blank as close as you can to balance. Most important is to use something like the pin chuck, your scroll chuck in a recess, or even the woodworm to give you a more positive hold, and keep the tailstock in use until you're round. As the first pair of pictures indicates, there is a simple way available to help your case. Tilt your bandsaw table and take away most of what you're not going to use anyway. In this case over a pound and a half of unneeded and balance-destroying wood was removed in two places in less than a minute, without hurting the choice of final shape a bit.
Of course, there are a lot of times when you could make a much deeper piece, if only you had a bigger bandsaw. If that's the case, use what you have and a bit of patience to arrive at the same result. First, make a circle-cutting jig. Too simple and useful an item for what we do not to have one. Mine's based on a 1/4 inch thick piece of ply and a 1" diameter center because of the pin chuck. Yours may vary. The attached sheet shows a board of 7 1/4" working down to a circle on a 6" bandsaw. If you don't have a chainsaw, you can nibble over, nibble under, nibble center and so forth until you have the final picture, which is cutting to the diameter you need. If you have a chainsaw, no problem to rough the piece a bit oversize, undercutting with the idea of making the final cut as pictured. Keeps you from those annoying circumstances that happen when you try to make multiple tangent cuts with the chainsaw, only to find that one set of corners or more is chocking the whole against the ways.
I'm sure there are other ways out there, but I can't find many methods pictured other than mounting a log section. Shouldn't have to do that.