|
Allan Batty Demo
On Oct. 23, 2004 we were pleased to have Allan Batty in the
shop for an all day demo. President Jim Rinde introduced Allan, whom he had seen
demonstrate in the past and his introduction of the Master of Masters, a wizard
of woodturning proved to be most appropriate. Paulo Marin and Seth Mac Arthur
were just back from spending a week with Allan at Steve Dunn’s woodturning
school and both commented that it was a wonderful learning experience.
Allan’s presentation was sprinkled with delightful stories
about the history of the woodturning trade and tools in Great Britain. Allan has
been turning since he apprenticed at age 15. He wouldn’t tell us how old he is
[He said he had been turning for 55 years (=70 and looking 60)] but he has a
lifetime of experience and it shows. After a great and enjoyable demo from
Stuart Batty last month, today we heard the other side of the story from
Stuart’s dad. The only thing that could have been better would have been to get
them together at the same time.
Allan gave those present the opportunity to decide what
they wanted to see him turn and the first request was to go over the use of the
skew chisel.
Some key points included:
- Lathe speed should be as
fast as you are comfortable with to get clean cuts.
- Only grind the skew edge
for hard wood. Hone the edge for soft wood.
- Rock the handle of the skew
up and down rather than pushing the blade into the work. This creates a
slicing action, providing cleaner cuts.
- Skew bevel angle = 40°.
This allows work on both hard and soft woods. A narrower angle leaves the edge
too fragile; a wider angle doesn’t allow a sharp enough edge. This angle is
achieved by grinding a blade bevel that is 1½ times as wide as the thickness
of the tool.
- Relieve the bevel below the
long point. This is a subtle rounding of the tool edge just before the
tip of the point and is actually on the side edge of the bevel. This
allows the skew to make shallow cove cuts without scoring the work.
Allan has produced an excellent DVD in his “Allan Batty
Masterclass” series on the skew chisel. It covers all the fine points of
using the skew and comes with a nice pamphlet to assist the turner on learning
the use of this tool. He gave the club a copy of this on DVD and this is very
clear with good close up views.
Allan passed along a good tip for all tools and cuts
regarding stance and balance. Check to see if you can start and finish the cut
without moving your feet, while maintaining your balance, this provides much
better control throughout the cut.
Allan completed a number of projects that were both
interesting and entertaining. They included a threaded mushroom shaped box, a
spherical puzzle box made from alternative ivory, a platter and laying out and
turning cabriolet legs
●
Threaded Mushroom Shaped Box
- This box was made from
English Box Wood which is very fine grained and also hard.
- The box incorporates hand
cut threads to fix the top to the bottom. Allan gave a complete explanation of
how to cut threads on both I.D. and O.D. surfaces. He explained the tools and
how to sharpen them.
- A jam type chuck with
tapered threads was used to hold the bottom of this box to finish off the base
which worked very well as a holding device.
- Allan noted, for course
woods that do not cut cleanly, a poured in-fill of colored epoxy works great
to cut threads into. He creates this by cutting a grove in the wood where he
wants the threads, pours in the colored epoxy he has prepared, and then waits
at least 3 to 7 days before removing the wood and cutting the threads in the
epoxy.
-
Again, Allan provides another excellent DVD in
his “Allan Batty Masterclass” series on hand cut threads that includes
a pamphlet. It’s everything you need to know to get started. He also
gave the club a copy of this DVD. If you are going to do thread chasing this
is a must see DVD as it gives close views and diagrams on how to start the
threads.
- Some interesting points
from this project included:
- Use the shadow of the
tool rest with a light behind it to determine if the bottom of the box is
flat.
- The secret to cutting
threads is learning the rhythm.
- 20 threads per in.
thread chasers are best to learn with. Don’t buy course threaded chasers.
- Polish the box off the
lathe.
- Allan uses Vonax
polishing compound – for silver – made in England.
- Lustre polishing
compound for darker woods.
● Spherical Puzzle Box in Alternative Ivory
- A negative angle scraper
was used to cut the alternative ivory.
- Here the unhandled
scraper blade is supported with an arm rest. This allows the tool support to
get close to the work.
- There is no burr on the
edge of these scrapers, they are honed.
- The sphere is cut using a
template as a gauge
- After rounding past center
on the sphere, the blank is reversed in a jam chuck.
- The chuck should grab the
sphere 10° - 15° shy of the center.
- The chuck should have a
slight inside taper (2-3 degrees), larger at the front, smaller at the back.
- After the sphere is
round, decorations (bead & cove) are cut on 6 sides.
● Platter
- The platter blank is first
mounted on a screw chuck.
- The bottom of the platter
is cut first with a 1/8” high, large dia. spigot.
- When the bottom is
finished, the platter is removed from the screw chuck and fit on a jam chuck
to cut and finish the top.
- The front is faced off and
then hollowed in the center area, working from the screw chuck hole out, to
remove the hole.
- Allan cut a small bead
between the edge and the hollowed center with a point tool creating a very
nice detail.
● Cabriolet Legs
- Allan demonstrated two
types of Cabriolet legs, one with the top of the turned section of the leg
centered in the blank and one with the top of the turned section of the leg
moved to the forward corner of the blank.
- These are turned using a
skew chisel and a spindle gouge and were quite different looking
Allan’s tool technique requires almost no sanding and is
beautifully executed. The opportunity to see a legend in action was a turner’s
dream.
Top of page
Back to November 2004 newsletter
|
|
|
Allan Batty
|
|
|
|
His shirt logo
|
|
|
|
Explaining how the skew chisel is really a slicing tool
|
|
|
|
Using the skew to start a pommel
|
|
|
|
Hand chasing threads on the inside of the Mushroom Box top
|
|
|
|
|
Shaping the top of the box in hard English Box Wood
|
|
|
|
Making matching male threads on the stem of the box
|
|
|
|
The top screwed onto the stem for final shaping
|
|
|
|
Stem shaped and threads shown
|
|
|
|
After the stem-box hollowed; remounted on threaded temporary chuck to finish bottom of box
|
|
|
|
|
Finished and polished Mushroom box
|
|
|
|
Box opened showing details on bottom
|
|
|
|
Inside view of box and top
|
|
|
|
Starting to make sphere from prepared box blank of alternative ivory
|
|
|
|
Template to check shperical shape
|
|
|
|
|
Sphere remounted in wooden jam chuck secured with tape; details being added
|
|
|
|
Finished sphere with hidden box
|
|
|
|
Opened to show the components. The inside box and lid had been prepared ahead and must fit perfectly prior to the sphere making process
|
|
|
|
Underside of Platter finished; reversed and held in jam chuck
|
|
|
|
Turning inside of platter
|
|
|
|
|
Hand sanding inside
|
|
|
|
Making bead at inside edge of rim with pyramid pointed tool - detail shown in inset
|
|
|
|
Using hand to pop the platter from the jam chuck
|
|
|
|
Using skew with cabriole leg in off center position
|
|
|
|
Finished leg in soft pine with no sanding
|
|
|
Top of page
Return to November 2004 newsletter
|