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A self-made wooden lathe
Tue, 04/12/2007 - 00:00 — Pekka Huhta
I had a problem: I needed a lathe for a couple of chisel handles but
had no intention of buying one. My workshop is about 2,3 x 2,4 m big
and already pretty full and I did not want to waste money for something
that could be easily built anyway.
I have used my hand drill for all sorts of small turning tasks,
modifying screw heads, polishing anything that could be gripped in the
chuck and rotated etc. So the thought of using a hand drill as the
motor for the drill was quite obvious.
Unfortunately I did not take photos during the building stage, but here is the finished lathe:
It’s made of an old, badly tarnished table top (which turned out to be
masur birch after I planed it down a bit) and workshop scraps. The
headstock, tailstock and toolrest base birch, and the rails (?) are
ash. Tool rest itself was carved of a scrap of Iroko which had enough
sapwood to prevent me from using it on my boat projects.
The first thing was to assemble the rails, headstock and end blocks on
the other end together. The headstock bearing was a brass bushing with
a flange in it. I have no idea what it has originally been for; it was
just a discovery from my “box of surprises”. It had 10 mm hole through
it. The spindle is just a knot bore re-ground so that it doesn’t drill
into the workpiece.
Tailstock bearing was drilled by inserting a 10 mm drill bit
through the headstock. This way I got them aligned properly. I did the
same thing “backwards” when I aligned the center of the drill holder on
the left end.
After drilling the hole for tailstock bearing I inserted a brass pipe
over there, drilled and tapped a piece of 10 mm steel plate for the
tailstock screw and added a locking screw. Here is the catch: there is
a ball bearing (just one 10 mm ball) between the tailstock screw and
(wassat sharp part that goes to the end of the workpiece). This way it
rotates very lightly and the tailstock screw doesn’t unscrew easily.
After assembly I took everything apart again for finishing. First I
used a quite thin mixture of turpentine, linseed oil and a tad of tar.
Using pine tar for everything is a bad habit of mine, coming from
fooling too much around in wooden boats. The final coatings were just
shellac.
All the other parts were just leftovers from my endless boxes, jugs and
tin cans full of screws. Total cost of building was zero, although it
took about a week or two to make in the evenings.
Here are the first leather capped chisel handles turned with the new lathe.
I hope you enjoyed the story, at least I had fun building that thing
Pekka