I absolutely LOVE this video ... how do you not have 100,000 subs already ? Thank you for explaining the process from start to finish ..... seriously helpful x
Claire’s Crafty Corner thank you! I often wonder the same thing when I’m sitting up at 1am editing videos 🤣 No problem at all, I’m glad it was helpful!
thanks alot, REALLY enjoyed the video of the resin tooth box, I've been turning wood for about a year and a half, and looking to expand my knowledge, and I believe you did just that...thanks again. have fun turning, looking forward to watching your next video.
Thanks for your time and explanations. Looks great and well presented. 👍 on the music to. Can we get details on you resin, I’m in Melbourne. Cheers Phil
Thanks Phil! Your resin needs will vary depending on your project. There’s some more details in a more recent video I’ve done, top 5 tips for resin. For this one I used resin from Kirkside Products.
Just now getting into turning. Very interested in resin so this video was perfect. Thanks for sharing and very nice job on the video. The finished piece looks great.
hey man very awesome tips, i just started learning about resin turning, been making resin jewelry since 2016 and now very keen to start something new, regards from Indonesia!!
Man, that is nice and I have to say, out of all my subscriptions you are the first to answer a couple questions I have had, but hadn't asked. I hope to attempt resin casting/turning soon, but got to get finished up with move and new shop set up first. I'm hitting subscribe for sure. Would be greatful to have some feedback positive or negative from you on my channel.
Cheers mate I’m glad a few of your questions got answered! I did another video more recently, top 5 resin tips that might be handy for you as well. There’s lots of tips throughout my videos though! I will check out your channel!
Pretty damn cool indeed! One question … is it possible that that five minute epoxy you used to attach the piece to the waste block could give way while turning? Have you ever had it happen?
I mean anything is possible, but I've never had it happen or heard of it happening for that matter. The epoxy is more than strong enough to cope. Another method commonly used by woodturners is hot glue, ewhich is no where near as strong as epoxy. But again, never seen or heard of that letting go either. It's a pretty safe method!
Wow great explanation in resin and turning. Now I know to use 600 gritt and not to throw my bits in the bin. Lol. Know wonder it was working out expensive. Keep up your hard work.
Infinity Wood Oz woodworking rule #1 mate, never throw anything away haha. You can also use one of those little diamond files if you have one. Sandpaper is just the cheapest way!
Great video and thanks for making it, I am practicing turning resin but I don't know why my carbine cutters are taking bits out and "yes" they are a bit painful on the hands. I will do what you said in sharpening them but what gauge would you recommend using for the inside and out or would you just use the carbine cutters.
Yeah give them a sharpen mate, and perhaps try smaller passes as well. I’d recommend using the round cutter for inside, it should do the smoothest job!
hey great video man! im curious tho when i turn a jar with a lid sometimes i run into the problem of my wood will move on me and shrink. and i was curious if turning with epoxy does that stop the wood from moving as incased in this form basically?
Hey Tristan. No it doesn’t stop it from moving, unless it’s completely cast/ covered. Because I’ve turned away parts of the epoxy and the raw timber is exposed it can certainly still expand and contract. With the small amount of timber in this piece though I doubt that movement will cause an issue. Certainly something to consider on solid timber pieces though!
Thanks Stuart! Speed is a very touchy subject mate. A lot of factors go into it. The main thing i consider is balance. An piece like this for example can be perfectly centred, but have more timber on one side and resin on the other. This means at slower speeds it will wobble more. My advice is what you feel comfortable working with mate
Great demo, wonderful result. My biggest problem in turning either covers or cups in small boxes is turning without a nipple ou a cavity in the center. Any suggestion to improve my turnings ? I use carbide tools (Hunter tools) by the way . Thanks
Hi Alain, The best way around that would be to get yourself a skew chisel or a flat nose scraper mate. They cover a lot more surface area at once, where as a carbide tip is a very small amount and can dig in at the center.
@@JNDCreations I tried a large round nose scraper but not the flat one. Thanks for the suggestion, and again for the video. I also saw you sanded with a softer pad than I
@@alainnoel_tourneur yeah round nose only has a small contact point as well. If you go with a flat nose I’d recommend putting a negative take on it, will be a lot easier on the resin to reduce chip out.
G'day Jax, very cool piece. I'm just starting to experiment with turning resin-how long do you let the blank cure before starting to turn? Nice to hear an Aussie accent!
Hey Ron, that all depends on the brand of resin mate. Let it go through its full curing process then turn it. Some stuff may be good after 24 hrs, other stuff may need a week.
Great video and beautiful piece. Question regarding the micro mesh pads. While turning a wood blank recently the dampened pads I used were leaving remnants of the pad color on the wood. Do you have a thoughts on what happened?
That’s a little odd Mike I haven’t had that happen before. Was it a light coloured timber? My only thought would be perhaps you were applying too much pressure with the pad? In saying that, I’ve literally burnt a hole in a pad and not had the colour transfer 😂 not quite sure sorry mate!
That will very much depend on the timber you’ve casted in the resin and where it sits. If it’s very dense and off to the side you’ll have a lot more wobble than if it’s light and centered. I normally find you increase you speed until the wobble is terrible, then go a little fast and it will level out. But it’ll vary for every casting
Good afternoon. Just watched your video on resin tooth box. (beautiful) what speed do you use on your large when turning PR. I fairly new at this but I do have rokon carbide tooling. Looking forward to hearing from you. Tony, New York
Hi Tony, Lathe speed can be extremely varied depending on a number of factors (size/ shape/ species/ density of timber, type of resin, type of turning tool). It makes it hard to give you an exact recommendation. I generally like to aim to have my piece around 1200 rpm if possible. Slowing right down to 600 rpm or less for sanding. Enjoy your turning mate!
@@JNDCreations Morning thanks for your response. I have some scrap PR that I want to glue to some wood to turn a bottle stopper. Can you tell me what glue to use. Thanks Tony
@@tonyfusilli7914 resin to wood I’d recommend a 5 minute epoxy mate. Scuff both surfaces with 60-80 grit, then glue together. Only if you can’t cast the together obviously. For anything wood to wood I always use titebond3
That will vary depending on a number of factors really. Mainly what your wood/ resin ratio is. I tend to find the sweet spot for me is anywhere between 800-1200rpm. Resin can get soft again on the lathe and turn rubbery if it gets to hot. The more resin in a piece the slower I tend to turn it, with more breaks for it to cool.
@@JNDCreations Thanks for that , its just that i had a lot of chipping and flying bits , like broken glass but i think my carbide bit was dull , I have tried rubbing the face on 600 but it takes a long time to get them really sharp , It might have been a combination of low speed and dull cutting tool , I got told to hold the angle down slighty while lathing resin with a carbide tool and not at 90 degress , what do you think,
@@frogzlegs6285 yeah if it’s chipping like that your angle it’s likely off and the cutter is dull. You can work your way up with the grits. Start around 200, then 400 then 600. Try raising your tool rest, and raising the base of your tool handle, angling the tip down slightly below center.
I'd like to know how you go about carving the epoxy without it chipping because when I use a square carbide bit even negative rake ones they chip and destroy the epoxy easily and I barely put any pressure and I switched to deep put epoxy and put it through a vacuum chamber to get all the bubbles out my only successful is when I use nothing but circular carbide bits for the whole process
Try sharpening your carbide bit mate and increasing your lathe speed. I find this really helps with chip out. You can also get square bits that have a very slight radius on them, that helps to!
@@mrdirtyd11 I’d put it face down on some 600 grit sand paper mate and make circles. The top, or bigger of the 2 flat sides. Don’t attempt to grind the angles
The peice that i am wanting to turn i think has a lot of bubbles through it, is there something i can do to fix this? i have heard of using a resin finish but no idea how this work or if it is a specific type of resin? any recommendations/suggestions?
Your best bet is to use a pressure pot when doing your casting to eliminate bubbles. That’s the only way you will achieve a completely clear cast. You can drill out bubbles and fill the hole with resin, but you will always be able to tell upon close inspection. If you can’t use a pressure pot the next best bet would be to use a super slow setting resin. The longer it takes to cure, the more bubbles can escape!
Killer tutorial(s). Just subbed! Tons of useful info, I know resin but brand spankin' to turning... been researching a grip load of mini lathes, getting more confused 😕 Any suggestions on brand/size for this 'Sheila' in So Cal? Will tell my artist pals about you, I'm sure they'll appreciate you the same as I do. Keep on keepin' on!!! 🤙🌊- Ruby
Thanks for the speedy response 👍 I'm going to check out those lathes now😁 Excited to finally have a solid guy to watch & learn from..BTW, my guy just ordered a pressure pot gig (lucky am I), I may be hitting you up for direction on that too😎 I'll surf your channel for more guidance first😉 Ciao for Now, R
Sounds like you’re well on your way to some good castings then! There’s a fair few casting projects on my channel so I’m sure you’ll find some helpful info 😁
Good day. I’m just starting out and am using carbide cutter and I can’t seem to get the angle right and I’m tearing up my projects. Are the cutters held at 90 degrees to the work piece?
Hi Allen, usually they are mate. Are your cutters nice and sharp? It’s also important to have your tool rest set so the cutters are sitting at the middle of the work piece. If you’re still getting tear out try and adjust your tool rest so the cutter is above center, then raise the handle of the tool so it’s pointing downwards slightly. This will emulate a negative take grind and should produce a softer cut
@@JNDCreations I just put new tips on the finisher, but it dug into the piece and now it’s chipped and have to replace it again. I’ll put a new one on the square one and give her another try. The screwed up piece will provide a little practice vs. waiting more resin. Thanks your your reply. Like watching your work.
The square cutter will be a lot more aggressive compared to a round cutter. Perhaps you pushed it a little hard and it dug in maybe? Hard to say without seeing what happened. Appreciate that mate thanks!
Each piece is different, there’s no set rpm that works best. A big factor is the wood that’s cast in it and if it’s offset or not. I just increase rpm until I get passed the wobble. In terms of negative rake, I occasionally use it, but traditional tools that are nice and sharp do the job well.
@@JNDCreations Gotcha, tried my 1st today and that shit is spooky lol. Have decent carbide and traditional. carbide def cut better but i did get the ocaisional pop and grab. was scared to go passed 1k rpm when its only held by the 4 jaw chuck. Thanks for the info, you do great work!
@@Davidrcobb you’ll find you’ll get smooth cuts above 1000 rpm I’d say mate. You can also try setting your tool rest above center and holding the tool handle higher than the rest to imitate a bit of a negative rake on your carbide cutters. All comes with practice mate.
@@Mignhad sorry mate I don’t have the link anymore. These carbide cutter were from beyond tools, but depending on where you get your tool it may take different sized cutting blades. As long as you get the size right, you can source them from several places!
Thank you for the reply. I am new and just wanted to test out turning not a solid block of resin but papers rolled with resin. Do you think it’s necessary to use carbide cutters? I would love any recommendations and advices!
@@Mignhad I think carbide cutters make resin turning a lot easier! If you have some experience wood turning the sharp traditional tools will work fine. But resin can be a little tricker than timber sometimes. Give it a shot though mate and see how you go! There’s plenty of tips through out my videos to help you out!
Thanks mate. Turning speeds can vary so much depending on a huge number of factors, it makes it hard to include those sort of details. Love the Victorys mate, Arlen Ness Signature Series!
👍✔️ JND Creations Destek Oldum Sizde Buyrun Kalıcı Destek Olalım Güzel Günler DilerimÖrnek: Özlü Söz , AtaSözü, Güzel Sözler Gibi Sevgilinin değeri onu sevenin sevgisi ile ölçülür.. 👍✔️
I absolutely LOVE this video ... how do you not have 100,000 subs already ? Thank you for explaining the process from start to finish ..... seriously helpful x
Claire’s Crafty Corner thank you! I often wonder the same thing when I’m sitting up at 1am editing videos 🤣
No problem at all, I’m glad it was helpful!
thanks alot, REALLY enjoyed the video of the resin tooth box, I've been turning wood for about a year and a half, and looking to expand my knowledge, and I believe you did just that...thanks again. have fun turning, looking forward to watching your next video.
Cheers David glad you enjoyed the video mate! There’s over 100 project videos on my channel mate so hopefully they will spark some ideas for you 🤙
F/A brother, you totally ROCKED it. Thanks for the 411 tips much appreciated.
Thanks mate! Glad the video could help you out!
Ripper of a piece! Plus, cheers for sharing your knowledge of turning resin too.
Keep on turning.
Cheers, Bluey 👍
pastle Woodturning thanks mate! Glad you enjoyed it and hope it helped!
Great work ... easy to follow .. and most enjoyable to watch
Thanks Brian, I’m glad you enjoyed the video!
exactly what I was looking for.... went back to the lathe, lifted my carbide tip higher, and hey presto no big chips... thank you
Glad I could help out Troy! 🤙
Thank you. You answered a lot of the questions I had about resin turning.
Glad it was helpful for you Lloyd!
A great tutorial! Love your music and quick vibrant explanations.
Thanks Syd!
Love the colour combo in this one
Will have to try the 600 grit trick on me carbide tools
Works a treat mate! Only on the flat side, don’t touch the angles 👍
Nice work, and great explanation on carbide tooling!
Glad you found it handy mate!
TY for explaining how things work, love it keep it up mate
Xzodia Zee no problem, hope it was helpful for you!
Trying to get into wood and resin turning. Loved the video and wonderful piece
Wicked mate I’m glad the video helped! I’ve got a heap of other content that might help you out to! Happy turning!
Thanks for sharing the tricks of the trade!! Bloody interesting stuff!
fotak47 no worries man! Thanks for checking it out
Sweet vid man. I'm turning some cut pieces from a resin river cheese board to create handles. This helped a ton!
That sounds like it’ll look awesome mate! Glad the video helped out!
Thanks for your time and explanations. Looks great and well presented. 👍 on the music to. Can we get details on you resin, I’m in Melbourne. Cheers Phil
Thanks Phil! Your resin needs will vary depending on your project. There’s some more details in a more recent video I’ve done, top 5 tips for resin. For this one I used resin from Kirkside Products.
Just now getting into turning. Very interested in resin so this video was perfect. Thanks for sharing and very nice job on the video. The finished piece looks great.
M Porter thanks mate! Resin is great fun to turn! I’m sure you’ll enjoy it
Very nice tutorial mate, one of the best I've watched. Plus, that's an awesome little tooth box, looks beautiful.
Mike Day thanks mate! Yeah it came out pretty well in the end!
hey man very awesome tips, i just started learning about resin turning, been making resin jewelry since 2016 and now very keen to start something new, regards from Indonesia!!
@@hermanbimz1816 that’s awesome man, I hope the video helped you out!
@@JNDCreations very keen to watch more about resin turning and different tipe of carbide soon 👍
@@hermanbimz1816 plenty of tips throughout my videos mate! I hope they help you out!
Man, that is nice and I have to say, out of all my subscriptions you are the first to answer a couple questions I have had, but hadn't asked. I hope to attempt resin casting/turning soon, but got to get finished up with move and new shop set up first. I'm hitting subscribe for sure. Would be greatful to have some feedback positive or negative from you on my channel.
Cheers mate I’m glad a few of your questions got answered! I did another video more recently, top 5 resin tips that might be handy for you as well. There’s lots of tips throughout my videos though!
I will check out your channel!
I wish I'd seen this video months ago! Thank you so much!
No worries! I’m glad you’ve found it now 🤙
Pretty damn cool indeed! One question … is it possible that that five minute epoxy you used to attach the piece to the waste block could give way while turning? Have you ever had it happen?
I mean anything is possible, but I've never had it happen or heard of it happening for that matter. The epoxy is more than strong enough to cope. Another method commonly used by woodturners is hot glue, ewhich is no where near as strong as epoxy. But again, never seen or heard of that letting go either. It's a pretty safe method!
Wow great explanation in resin and turning. Now I know to use 600 gritt and not to throw my bits in the bin. Lol. Know wonder it was working out expensive. Keep up your hard work.
Infinity Wood Oz woodworking rule #1 mate, never throw anything away haha.
You can also use one of those little diamond files if you have one. Sandpaper is just the cheapest way!
Thanks mate great tutorial legend
No worries mate, glad you enjoyed it!
Fabulous tutorial! answered so many questions i was stuck on with my own resin pieces.
Wicked! I’m glad it helped you out mate! Thanks for checking it out 🤙
@@JNDCreations subbing to follow for more tips
Great video and thanks for making it, I am practicing turning resin but I don't know why my carbine cutters are taking bits out and "yes" they are a bit painful on the hands. I will do what you said in sharpening them but what gauge would you recommend using for the inside and out or would you just use the carbine cutters.
Yeah give them a sharpen mate, and perhaps try smaller passes as well. I’d recommend using the round cutter for inside, it should do the smoothest job!
hey great video man! im curious tho when i turn a jar with a lid sometimes i run into the problem of my wood will move on me and shrink. and i was curious if turning with epoxy does that stop the wood from moving as incased in this form basically?
Hey Tristan. No it doesn’t stop it from moving, unless it’s completely cast/ covered. Because I’ve turned away parts of the epoxy and the raw timber is exposed it can certainly still expand and contract. With the small amount of timber in this piece though I doubt that movement will cause an issue. Certainly something to consider on solid timber pieces though!
Love the video. I'm very new to turning, what speed do you recommend while shaping the piece?
Thanks Stuart! Speed is a very touchy subject mate. A lot of factors go into it. The main thing i consider is balance. An piece like this for example can be perfectly centred, but have more timber on one side and resin on the other. This means at slower speeds it will wobble more. My advice is what you feel comfortable working with mate
Great demo, wonderful result. My biggest problem in turning either covers or cups in small boxes is turning without a nipple ou a cavity in the center. Any suggestion to improve my turnings ? I use carbide tools (Hunter tools) by the way . Thanks
Hi Alain,
The best way around that would be to get yourself a skew chisel or a flat nose scraper mate. They cover a lot more surface area at once, where as a carbide tip is a very small amount and can dig in at the center.
@@JNDCreations I tried a large round nose scraper but not the flat one. Thanks for the suggestion, and again for the video. I also saw you sanded with a softer pad than I
@@alainnoel_tourneur yeah round nose only has a small contact point as well. If you go with a flat nose I’d recommend putting a negative take on it, will be a lot easier on the resin to reduce chip out.
@@JNDCreations thank you for the skew suggestion, it improved my turned centers a lot
@@alainnoel_tourneur glad I could help mate!
G'day Jax, very cool piece. I'm just starting to experiment with turning resin-how long do you let the blank cure before starting to turn? Nice to hear an Aussie accent!
Hey Ron, that all depends on the brand of resin mate. Let it go through its full curing process then turn it. Some stuff may be good after 24 hrs, other stuff may need a week.
Great video and beautiful piece. Question regarding the micro mesh pads. While turning a wood blank recently the dampened pads I used were leaving remnants of the pad color on the wood. Do you have a thoughts on what happened?
That’s a little odd Mike I haven’t had that happen before. Was it a light coloured timber? My only thought would be perhaps you were applying too much pressure with the pad? In saying that, I’ve literally burnt a hole in a pad and not had the colour transfer 😂 not quite sure sorry mate!
How about speed? Do you turn at the same speeds as an all wood piece or does it need to be faster?
That will very much depend on the timber you’ve casted in the resin and where it sits. If it’s very dense and off to the side you’ll have a lot more wobble than if it’s light and centered. I normally find you increase you speed until the wobble is terrible, then go a little fast and it will level out. But it’ll vary for every casting
Good afternoon. Just watched your video on resin tooth box. (beautiful) what speed do you use on your large when turning PR. I fairly new at this but I do have rokon carbide tooling. Looking forward to hearing from you. Tony, New York
Hi Tony,
Lathe speed can be extremely varied depending on a number of factors (size/ shape/ species/ density of timber, type of resin, type of turning tool). It makes it hard to give you an exact recommendation. I generally like to aim to have my piece around 1200 rpm if possible. Slowing right down to 600 rpm or less for sanding.
Enjoy your turning mate!
@@JNDCreations
Morning thanks for your response. I have some scrap PR that I want to glue to some wood to turn a bottle stopper. Can you tell me what glue to use. Thanks Tony
@@tonyfusilli7914 resin to wood I’d recommend a 5 minute epoxy mate. Scuff both surfaces with 60-80 grit, then glue together. Only if you can’t cast the together obviously. For anything wood to wood I always use titebond3
@@JNDCreations
Thanks again for your quick response. One day I might get into casting. It looks like the possibilities are endless.
@@tonyfusilli7914 they certainly are mate! Limited only by imagination!
Wat tipe of pot you use i am new in the bisness isit heating or vacuum
It’s a pressure pot. You could also use a vacuum chamber but I prefer the pressure pot,
Awesome.
Thanks Bob!
Hi Great work , What speed do you set on your lathe , When cutting ,
Thanks. What do you mean by cutting? While I’m turning generally or while I’m parting pieces off?
@@JNDCreations I mean when your turning a resin and wood piece . What RPM
That will vary depending on a number of factors really. Mainly what your wood/ resin ratio is. I tend to find the sweet spot for me is anywhere between 800-1200rpm. Resin can get soft again on the lathe and turn rubbery if it gets to hot. The more resin in a piece the slower I tend to turn it, with more breaks for it to cool.
@@JNDCreations Thanks for that , its just that i had a lot of chipping and flying bits , like broken glass but i think my carbide bit was dull , I have tried rubbing the face on 600 but it takes a long time to get them really sharp , It might have been a combination of low speed and dull cutting tool , I got told to hold the angle down slighty while lathing resin with a carbide tool and not at 90 degress , what do you think,
@@frogzlegs6285 yeah if it’s chipping like that your angle it’s likely off and the cutter is dull. You can work your way up with the grits. Start around 200, then 400 then 600.
Try raising your tool rest, and raising the base of your tool handle, angling the tip down slightly below center.
I'd like to know how you go about carving the epoxy without it chipping because when I use a square carbide bit even negative rake ones they chip and destroy the epoxy easily and I barely put any pressure and I switched to deep put epoxy and put it through a vacuum chamber to get all the bubbles out my only successful is when I use nothing but circular carbide bits for the whole process
Try sharpening your carbide bit mate and increasing your lathe speed. I find this really helps with chip out. You can also get square bits that have a very slight radius on them, that helps to!
@JND Creations thanks for the reply I'll give that a shot how would you recommend sharpening the bits?
@@mrdirtyd11 I’d put it face down on some 600 grit sand paper mate and make circles. The top, or bigger of the 2 flat sides. Don’t attempt to grind the angles
@JND Creations awesome I'll try that as soon as a get the chance thank you so much
The peice that i am wanting to turn i think has a lot of bubbles through it, is there something i can do to fix this? i have heard of using a resin finish but no idea how this work or if it is a specific type of resin? any recommendations/suggestions?
Your best bet is to use a pressure pot when doing your casting to eliminate bubbles. That’s the only way you will achieve a completely clear cast. You can drill out bubbles and fill the hole with resin, but you will always be able to tell upon close inspection.
If you can’t use a pressure pot the next best bet would be to use a super slow setting resin. The longer it takes to cure, the more bubbles can escape!
Killer tutorial(s). Just subbed! Tons of useful info, I know resin but brand spankin' to turning... been researching a grip load of mini lathes, getting more confused 😕 Any suggestions on brand/size for this 'Sheila' in So Cal? Will tell my artist pals about you, I'm sure they'll appreciate you the same as I do.
Keep on keepin' on!!!
🤙🌊- Ruby
Thanks Ruby!
I’m sure you’ll have a larger variety over there, but from what we can access I’d say the comet 3 or a laguna would be a great option!
Thanks for the speedy response 👍 I'm going to check out those lathes now😁
Excited to finally have a solid guy to watch & learn from..BTW, my guy just ordered a pressure pot gig (lucky am I), I may be hitting you up for direction on that too😎
I'll surf your channel for more guidance first😉
Ciao for Now, R
Sounds like you’re well on your way to some good castings then! There’s a fair few casting projects on my channel so I’m sure you’ll find some helpful info 😁
Good day. I’m just starting out and am using carbide cutter and I can’t seem to get the angle right and I’m tearing up my projects. Are the cutters held at 90 degrees to the work piece?
Hi Allen, usually they are mate. Are your cutters nice and sharp? It’s also important to have your tool rest set so the cutters are sitting at the middle of the work piece.
If you’re still getting tear out try and adjust your tool rest so the cutter is above center, then raise the handle of the tool so it’s pointing downwards slightly. This will emulate a negative take grind and should produce a softer cut
@@JNDCreations I just put new tips on the finisher, but it dug into the piece and now it’s chipped and have to replace it again. I’ll put a new one on the square one and give her another try. The screwed up piece will provide a little practice vs. waiting more resin. Thanks your your reply. Like watching your work.
The square cutter will be a lot more aggressive compared to a round cutter. Perhaps you pushed it a little hard and it dug in maybe? Hard to say without seeing what happened.
Appreciate that mate thanks!
If my resin is chipping is it because my carbide tools are dull.
That can certainly be the cause as well!
what rpm are you using for resin and are u using a negative rake?
Each piece is different, there’s no set rpm that works best. A big factor is the wood that’s cast in it and if it’s offset or not. I just increase rpm until I get passed the wobble.
In terms of negative rake, I occasionally use it, but traditional tools that are nice and sharp do the job well.
@@JNDCreations Gotcha, tried my 1st today and that shit is spooky lol. Have decent carbide and traditional. carbide def cut better but i did get the ocaisional pop and grab. was scared to go passed 1k rpm when its only held by the 4 jaw chuck.
Thanks for the info, you do great work!
@@Davidrcobb you’ll find you’ll get smooth cuts above 1000 rpm I’d say mate. You can also try setting your tool rest above center and holding the tool handle higher than the rest to imitate a bit of a negative rake on your carbide cutters. All comes with practice mate.
@@JNDCreations Awesome advice, began to notice this today. certainly getting easier each attempt. ty so much for the help.
@@Davidrcobb happy to help mate!
could you provide carbide cutters link again?
@@Mignhad sorry mate I don’t have the link anymore. These carbide cutter were from beyond tools, but depending on where you get your tool it may take different sized cutting blades. As long as you get the size right, you can source them from several places!
Thank you for the reply. I am new and just wanted to test out turning not a solid block of resin but papers rolled with resin. Do you think it’s necessary to use carbide cutters? I would love any recommendations and advices!
@@Mignhad I think carbide cutters make resin turning a lot easier! If you have some experience wood turning the sharp traditional tools will work fine. But resin can be a little tricker than timber sometimes. Give it a shot though mate and see how you go! There’s plenty of tips through out my videos to help you out!
Thank you
You are most welcome!
Good tutorial but you didn't mention anything about turning speeds. Good choice in bikes. I have 2 Victory motorcycles
Thanks mate. Turning speeds can vary so much depending on a huge number of factors, it makes it hard to include those sort of details. Love the Victorys mate, Arlen Ness Signature Series!
Polyethylene or polypropylene
For what mate?
@@JNDCreations Resin won't stick to either.
👍✔️ JND Creations Destek Oldum Sizde Buyrun Kalıcı Destek Olalım Güzel Günler DilerimÖrnek: Özlü Söz , AtaSözü, Güzel Sözler Gibi Sevgilinin değeri onu sevenin sevgisi ile ölçülür.. 👍✔️
🤙
very nice video, i like
🤙