I was thinking more along line of setting the tool on top of the tool rest and making sure it's cutting on line or slightly above.Because it’s not that important, and often the rest needs to be other than on-center.
A metal lathe is a different story for different reasoning.
Tim
Are you serious? My scrapers cut without a burr. They cut at the joint of two flats and cutting occurs when the sharp end touches the wood in the right position like Steve says above. Wood is different than steel. In over 30 years of machining steel I never had to worry about tool presentation. The only worry was an interrupted cut that was mostly taken care of by grinding off the chip breaker on the carbide insert that usually made it across the 50 plus 1 1/4" holes. For over 90% of my time at GE I turned parts for the motorized wheels, you know those wheels that took those 15 foot tires for deep truck mines.When you use a scraper, the burr is doing the job, not the flat of the steel. I was taught to keep the handle higher than the burr to prevent the scraper from self feeding and getting a catch.
Might be useful, but only for something round.So, forget about tool rest height and imagine you just want a quick way to have the exact centerline of a piece. Still not worth the $7.00 it cost?
Dead serious. I cant believe that you didn’t set up your tool to be somewhat on center cutting steel. You must have never cut threads, or at least eyeballed that the tool was close to center. Never is a very bold statement! I’ve taught way too many classes where someone gets a catch with a scraper. When they get deeper into a bowl, they have no feeling for where center is and a crash results. This usually happens a couple inches up the side. Unless you use a stone to flatten your steel after every time you sharpen, there is a burr there from the grinding process. I am highly aware that wood and steel are different. I worked in a model shop at Caterpillar and turned steel for over a 15 years and have turned wood for over 38 years with personal time turning with John Jordan. I haven’t seen it all, but I’ve seen a hell of a lot over the decadesAre you serious? My scrapers cut without a burr. They cut at the joint of two flats and cutting occurs when the sharp end touches the wood in the right position like Steve says above. Wood is different than steel. In over 30 years of machining steel I never had to worry about tool presentation. The only worry was an interrupted cut that was mostly taken care of by grinding off the chip breaker on the carbide insert that usually made it across the 50 plus 1 1/4" holes. For over 90% of my time at GE I turned parts for the motorized wheels, you know those wheels that took those 15 foot tires for deep truck mines.