Fred W. Hargis Jr Posted September 12, 2024 Report Posted September 12, 2024 I caught this on another forum....explains why I try to be extra careful (it's less than a minute): HandyDan, HARO50, Grandpadave52 and 1 other 4 Quote
Gerald Posted September 12, 2024 Report Posted September 12, 2024 Have you watched Tim Yoder video on catches. He creates the catch and explains it. Fred W. Hargis Jr, Grandpadave52, HandyDan and 1 other 1 3 Quote
lew Posted September 12, 2024 Report Posted September 12, 2024 Hard to tell because RPMs in a video are difficult to determine but it seems the lathe was running very slow. Slow RPMs can have the effect of making catches easier to happen. When I use a jam chuck, I also use strapping tape to secure the piece to the chuck. Grandpadave52 and Fred W. Hargis Jr 2 Quote
Fred W. Hargis Jr Posted September 12, 2024 Author Report Posted September 12, 2024 I loved that Yoder video, and i hadn't seen it before now. Thank you. lew and Grandpadave52 2 Quote
Gerald Posted September 13, 2024 Report Posted September 13, 2024 On 9/12/2024 at 3:03 PM, Fred W. Hargis Jr said: I loved that Yoder video, and i hadn't seen it before now. Thank you. Be sure to watch the second part Grandpadave52, Fred W. Hargis Jr and lew 3 Quote
Fred W. Hargis Jr Posted September 15, 2024 Author Report Posted September 15, 2024 I've watched his stuff on catches through part 5. I was most interested in his relief grind on a scraper. I did finally buy one and it's a "flat grind" (Tim's words). I'm considering doing the relief grind on it, but doesn't angling that tool down in use do the same thing? lew and Grandpadave52 2 Quote
lew Posted September 15, 2024 Report Posted September 15, 2024 1 hour ago, Fred W. Hargis Jr said: but doesn't angling that tool down in use do the same thing Yes, it sorta does, but typically scrapers are help "flat". The change in the grind makes it so you don't have to adjust your "stance" when working on a bowl. And the scraper is less aggressive when removing material. Many of the carbide cutter companies put a "negative rake" on their cutters for the same reason- to make them less aggressive. HandyDan, Grandpadave52 and Fred W. Hargis Jr 2 1 Quote
lew Posted September 15, 2024 Report Posted September 15, 2024 I guess it is all in how you learned to turn. If you look at Richard Raffan, he uses scrapers almost everywhere. If you watch his sharpening videos, he doesn't add the relief grind to his scrapers. Grandpadave52 and Fred W. Hargis Jr 1 1 Quote
Gerald Posted September 15, 2024 Report Posted September 15, 2024 According to Stuart Batty angling a flat scraper does not equate to a negative rack grind. I have changed two of my scrapers to negative profile. Yes it does not allow you to hog off material but it is almost catch proof and I think gives a cleaner finish. As for angles I think I have 70degree for bottom and 25 on top. when you sharpen you just grind the bottom till top bevel gets too short and then grind the top bevel. Fred W. Hargis Jr and Grandpadave52 1 1 Quote
HandyDan Posted September 15, 2024 Report Posted September 15, 2024 Here is a very good video on scrapers. Good info here. lew, Grandpadave52 and Fred W. Hargis Jr 2 1 Quote
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