October 9, 20178 yr Survey question of the day! What is your favorite style of spur drive? I've probably seen a dozen different variations.... two prong, four prong, round with no prongs! All types out there.... IF I were to suggest we develop a spur drive to mount in our Easy Chuck... what style should it be? I'm not that smart, so pictures help... a lot! :0) GO!
October 9, 20178 yr Author So the center point is spring loaded.... why is that a good thing? What does that do for you?
October 9, 20178 yr 5 minutes ago, Jim from Easy Wood Tools said: So the center point is spring loaded.... why is that a good thing? What does that do for you? All that is needed to line it up is a small mark and then there is not the big deep mark left by the standard center. The point holds the center but retracts as the tailstock is tightened. When making small items a substantial amount of wood can be saved because of it.
October 9, 20178 yr Author 4 minutes ago, HandyDan said: All that is needed to line it up is a small mark and then there is not the big deep mark left by the standard center. The point holds the center but retracts as the tailstock is tightened. When making small items a substantial amount of wood can be saved because of it. Thanks! Learn something every day!
October 9, 20178 yr It depends on what I'm doing, I have one very similar to what Dan posted for spindle work. I like working with a chuck so I use that drive to turn a tenon and then mount the piece in the chuck. Saves me removing the chuck. If I'm rough turning bowls I like to start between centers so I use a two prong(originally 4) drive for that with no chuck. Steve
October 9, 20178 yr Another nice this about this type of drive spur- if a major catch occurs, the tiny teeth will slip rather than tear the wood apart- which could happen with the 2/4 prong drives.
October 9, 20178 yr It depends on what I'm doing, I have one very similar to what Dan posted for spindle work. I like working with a chuck so I use that drive to turn a tenon and then mount the piece in the chuck. Saves me removing the chuck. If I'm rough turning bowls I like to start between centers so I use a two prong(originally 4) drive for that with no chuck. Steve
October 10, 20178 yr The Steb center I use most is a morse taper Sorby I think and also have one like Dan showed which makes it easy to remove the Steb and mount in chuck. As was stated It depends on what I am making and from what. For dry wood under 4 inch diameter the Steb. For green wood the 4 prong. When turning a imbalanced piece with bark I will use a drive called Elio drive which has a MT and kindof like a faceplate with screw holes. https://screenshots.firefox.com/3zso8glzVdJ3ql6Y/www.onegoodturn.ca
October 11, 20178 yr Author Thank you all for the feedback... I have a great job. I get to play with tools and think about which tool I want next! ....and then... they pay me to do this! Thanks Jim
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