Came here for just a sip from Tomislav's knowledge fountain...what I received was a firehose full of wisdom, tips and a few tricks...now to apply the information and see what works for me. Two thumbs on on another great video Sir.
Hi I found you a week or two ago and have the Richard Raffan books, I would like say you are a breath of fresh air, the way you put an in depth approach is easily understood. I cannot believe how much I’ve learned from you so much so that I have ordered my new Record Coronet herald and it has arrived today. I hope you keep posting for all who want to learn this wonderful skill. Regards Ian from Leeds West Yorkshire England.
I’ve only just started to turn wood and it frightens the life out of me as I’ve had a few bad catches. Your videos are very informative and it’s beginning to make sense why the gouge has been catching, I’ve been going in at the wrong angle. Thanks for the videos, I’ve just subscribed and given you a thumbs up.
Tomislav bonjour .Cette vidéo m'aide beaucoup car l'affutage et moi cela fait deux...De la matière ,j'en mange énormément et cela réduit considérablement la longueur des ma gouge...Je vais m'appliquer ce matin à essayer de réparer mes erreurs de débutant ,quitte à regarder plusieurs fois la vidéo afin d'arriver à quelque chose de correcte. Alors oui cela aide beaucoup car quand on débute on a besoin d'apprendre et d'être conseillé. Un grand merci Tomislav car vous pensez aux apprentis tourneur. La façon d'utiliser la gouge également...Je comprends pourquoi elle fiche le camp...je m'y prend très mal...Une très bonne année my friend.👍
Thank you very much for kind words and support 🤗, I would advise to just practice and repete and you'll get better with each bowl.... Enjoy your time on the lathe
This is easily the best tutorial on freehand sharpening I've seen yet. Clear, concise, thorough & very good camera work. I've just added this to my favorites list & will be referring to it often. Thank you, and greetings from the high country of the Colorado Rocky Mountains, USA.
Timely video. Just what I needed after I totally destroyed a bowl blank over the last two days. Lotsa catches-tool marks-...so frustrated right now. 😤 Spot on on getting the bananas out of one's ears! Full attention is needed when woodworking-all five senses need to be on the work.
Hello Tomislav, I have learnt something from you again today. Even though I'm quite good at turning bowls, I always set the gauge incorrectly when scraping. I will do better from now on and hold the handle lower. The difference is really enormous. Thank you once again for your extremely instructive videos. You are not only an excellent turner but also a great teacher. Greetings Andreas
I've only been turning for a year on my 1959 Craftsman wood lathe. I have mastered the turning tools pretty well except the bowl gouge. Now that I have watched your video, I have new insight about how to use it proper. Nice bowl, by the way..... N. E. U.S.A.
I'm still making some mistakes ... but ...now I'm at least aware of what I did to cause the mistake . What a difference!!!!! Thanks very much for sharing your expertise in such a clear and caring fashion.
Excellent video. Definitely provided some ideas for ways to improve my bowl turning. These videos are really helpful. It would be interesting to see something in the future on rim design and considerations. Thanks for all the videos you are doing; you have a really good presentation and teaching style.
I use a variety of tools, many of them I made myself, that I use more than I use a bowl gouge. But I rarely turn a uniform blank like the one in the video. When I need a special tool I just make what I need. However this is an excellent tutorial for using a gouge 👍👌
Thank you for directing me to see this video. It answered many questions about sharpening tools and bowl turning. To date I have only done spindle turning, but this video encourages me to spread my wings.
WOW, what a great video full of so much detail. thank you for all your inspiration you’re a great teacher. Someday I hope to be able to turn as well as you. Thanks again
Recently started learning turning and I've watched all of the people you've mentioned over the last few months. I think you've put together a good synthesis of all of their methods with good explanation.
Outstanding method of teaching ! Amazing attention to detail. Helpful tips and tricks. Perfect camera position and angles. A genuine treasure for those trying to learn.
Excellent tutorial, Tomislav, on the use of the bowl gouge. My son has started turning and will find this whole series of tutorials very helpful. Thank you for your gracious sharing of these with the rest of us!
Excellent video today and I really learned a lot. It was beneficial to see the same cuts multiple times instead of just once and the camera angles were good. Thank you for passing along your knowledge.
Another fantastic tutorial video. Your descriptions of gouge use are so clear and precise and I will refer back to these videos frequently to freshen my use of tools when I keep making novice errors. Many thanks for your precious time you obviously put into these.
Thanks again for another great explanation of how the tools work. I also follow Glenn Teague who equally well explains how both conventional gouges and his range of carbides cut. He makes a clear distinction between cutting and scraping and claims that applied correctly his carbides cut rather than scrape. To my mind, your and Richard’s application of “scrapers “ is not as a scraper, rather as a flat cutter using the burr as the blade primarily cutting the remaining side grain. Incidentally, I also enjoyed an earlier video on card “scrapers” and made a few from an old saw. I sometimes use these to refine the outside of my bowls as a a fine shear cutter. I believe that you were planning a follow up card scraping video and look forward to viewing it when it comes. Thanks again.
Your "ruined" grind reminded me of some of the botch jobs I did when starting. 🙂 I'm still no pro, but the sharpening process is a lot less intimidating now. Great videos, Tomislav! Thanks for sharing!
I just subscribed. Thanks for the woodturning tips. My wife and I are beginners at this, I have metal lathe experience as a retired mechanic, but woodturning has its own nuances that working with metal doesn't. Loved those bowls.
I started shaping some of my bowl gouges in this manner and it has been a game changer for me! I've been wanting to do it for quite some time and I am just now getting enough confidence in trying this grind. You are correct Tomislav in saying it might not look so good but it performs for me. The difference is rather remarkable! Thanks again for the videos you make. between your channel and Richard's I am always learning something. Can't take it all in at once though gotta let it digest a little. Lol. Thanks again Tomislav and hope you enjoy your day.
Thank you very much, I think he helped out many as me,but it all comes down to practice and how much of those advises you want to hear.... I'm really gratefull to have Richard to guide especially in beginnings
Огромное спасибо за такое подробное видео.Я не точил со школы лет 30...вчера испортил три большие тарелки именно малым реером 10 мм..Эх пораньше бы посмотреть...Спасибо..
Came back to add this: I’ve struggled since beginning my woodturning to understand how to effectively use a bowl gouge. I have two, but have been exclusively using my EasyWood tools with the carbide tips. Results were good, but tons of tear-out. I watched your video, and the “open/closed” and numbering you demonstrated just CLICKED for me. I made a pretty awesome bowl after that, minimal tear-out! THANK YOU SO K”MUCH!!
In Minute 24:50 you describe how to apply the forces with your left hand. At the beginning (and sometimes still now) I struggle not to apply pressure. I have a suggestion for another video, focusing only on the force of the left hand: 1. Show the correct application of the push-cut again. Also do it with ONLY the right hand, if possible. This shows clearly, that the left hand theoretically is not needed. For fun I was thinking about hanging a weight with a string on the gauge to apply gravitational downward force and try to do the whole cut with only my right hand. ;-) 2. Show what happens if you apply pressure with your left hand to the wood (do it wrong). Make a full outside cut from base to rim. Show, how the bouncing gets worse and worse, the more you come to the rim of the bowl. Show the extreme bouncing with the camera close to the gouge tip, ideally in slow-motion. Put a black pen to the outside of the bowl. Stop the lathe to show the spirals that occured. 3. Show what to do, if the bouncing has startet (correction of a false start). My experience is, that you will nearly never get it under control when you try to restart the cut in the middle of the bowl. If the bevel ist riding on a bouncy surface, I never manage to make it better on the way up. The only successful ways for me (so far) was: a) start again at the very beginning, at the foot). b) take a scraper to remove the bounciness, then go back too the gouge. c) if I feel the boucing starting, I stop pushing forward completely and stay at the same spot for a few seconds to give the gouge time to get it round again, but this doesn't work very often and it leaves a visible line.
Thank you sir for suggestion, I took your comment and will see what I can do about it.... Also some of the idea you proposed is shown by Stuart Batty, great teacher , so I'll try to do it the best I can... Thank you for watching
Hi Tomislav, that was a interesting way that you corrected you tool sharpening. your definitely not afraid of the push cut...lol. the clock theory was helpful. I do not have a chuck for bowl turning yet. I believe you had the Record Power DM320 before which , is what I have now; do you know by chance the size of chuck for the DM320? I guess I should contact Record Power for advise. Thank you for the video. It got my interest now for bowl turning. Ken
Another excellent video. I'm just starting to learn wood turning . Very clearly explained. You have such a wealth of knowledge. What grinding wheel is that and what grit. Thanks
Great tutorial tommi, really well explained and demonstrated. Thanks for your time in producing these videos, I know it takes you away from your production turning, however rest assured and many other turners very much like and appreciate what you’re doing. Great bowls as well.I’d like to refer my trainees to these videos if that’s ok can I use this video and show trainees. I don’t want to breech any copyrights though. Thanks tommi.
Great job explaining the techniques of using the bowl gouge. I have been following Richard for some time now and you can certainly see his expertise in your work. Would you mind telling me what course wheels you use on your grinder. And I’m assuming that you use a high speed grinder. Getting a grinder setup is my last obstacle to get started turning. Thanks.
Thank you Jim, Richard is my mentor so a lot of the stuff I learned from him. I have full speed grinder, and 60 grit coarse wheel and on the right 100 grit cbn.
31:00 For me as a beginner it makes sense to ONLY use the push-cut. Why? Because I still need practice, so using the push-cut to rough-shape the bowl I can train the correct position of my feet, the right feed rate and holding of the tool. When i come to the finish cut, I re-sharpen my gouge and with the practice of the rough cuts just 2 minutes before I find it easier to accomplish the finishing pass. For a very experienced woodturner this surely is not neccessary anymore.
Came here for just a sip from Tomislav's knowledge fountain...what I received was a firehose full of wisdom, tips and a few tricks...now to apply the information and see what works for me. Two thumbs on on another great video Sir.
Extremely big thanks for lovely words sir.... Really appriciate that and to be able to help out
Boy, that “ruined edge” sure looked familiar!
Thanks for posting this, there is hope for the future!
Hi I found you a week or two ago and have the Richard Raffan books, I would like say you are a breath of fresh air, the way you put an in depth approach is easily understood. I cannot believe how much I’ve learned from you so much so that I have ordered my new Record Coronet herald and it has arrived today. I hope you keep posting for all who want to learn this wonderful skill.
Regards Ian from Leeds West Yorkshire England.
Thank you Ian very much 🤗 enjoy your new lathe,its a nice lathe 🤗
Each time I watch this video, (numerous times) I continue to learn. You are the best on the web!
Man, you guys who have done this dozens of times make it look too easy! I need to get some beater gouges and just practice all day for a week
That's a good plan as it all comes down to practice ☺️
A Master and a wealth of knowledge! Who ever finds you on TH-cam needs to be prepared to receive a rare prized treasure.😮
I really appriciate that ☺️
I’ve only just started to turn wood and it frightens the life out of me as I’ve had a few bad catches. Your videos are very informative and it’s beginning to make sense why the gouge has been catching, I’ve been going in at the wrong angle. Thanks for the videos, I’ve just subscribed and given you a thumbs up.
Thank you very much and really appriciate the support....
Tomislav bonjour .Cette vidéo m'aide beaucoup car l'affutage et moi cela fait deux...De la matière ,j'en mange énormément et cela réduit considérablement la longueur des ma gouge...Je vais m'appliquer ce matin à essayer de réparer mes erreurs de débutant ,quitte à regarder plusieurs fois la vidéo afin d'arriver à quelque chose de correcte. Alors oui cela aide beaucoup car quand on débute on a besoin d'apprendre et d'être conseillé. Un grand merci Tomislav car vous pensez aux apprentis tourneur. La façon d'utiliser la gouge également...Je comprends pourquoi elle fiche le camp...je m'y prend très mal...Une très bonne année my friend.👍
Thank you very much for kind words and support 🤗, I would advise to just practice and repete and you'll get better with each bowl.... Enjoy your time on the lathe
Thank you for another demonstration of what to do to become a better turner.
This is easily the best tutorial on freehand sharpening I've seen yet. Clear, concise, thorough & very good camera work. I've just added this to my favorites list & will be referring to it often. Thank you, and greetings from the high country of the Colorado Rocky Mountains, USA.
Greetings to Rocky mountins, thank you very much for watching
Your explanations are so clear and well thought out they are really helpful!! Thank You!!!
Thank you sir
Excellent tutorial!
Thank you so much. This is invaluable to a novice turner as myself. God bless .
Timely video. Just what I needed after I totally destroyed a bowl blank over the last two days. Lotsa catches-tool marks-...so frustrated right now. 😤
Spot on on getting the bananas out of one's ears! Full attention is needed when woodworking-all five senses need to be on the work.
Just take your time and don't rush learning process.... Thank you for watching
Thanks, i learn so much from your videos. Your channel has elevated my turning by leaps and bounds.
Really glad to hear that 🤗 thank you very much for watching
You’re absolutely right it’s only the edge that does the cut as long as the secondary doesn’t get in the way it doesn’t matter.
Indeed, well Said, thank you for watching
Excellent video, great refresher course and allowed me to realize that I developed some bad habits over the last year
Thank you, really appriciate that ☺️
Hello Tomislav,
I have learnt something from you again today. Even though I'm quite good at turning bowls, I always set the gauge incorrectly when scraping. I will do better from now on and hold the handle lower. The difference is really enormous. Thank you once again for your extremely instructive videos. You are not only an excellent turner but also a great teacher.
Greetings Andreas
Thank you Andreas, I'm glad to be able to help out ☺️
I've only been turning for a year on my 1959 Craftsman wood lathe. I have mastered the turning tools pretty well except the bowl gouge.
Now that I have watched your video, I have new insight about how to use it proper.
Nice bowl, by the way.....
N. E. U.S.A.
Thank you, glad I could help out ☺️
I'm still making some mistakes ... but ...now I'm at least aware of what I did to cause the mistake . What a difference!!!!! Thanks very much for sharing your expertise in such a clear and caring fashion.
Really appriciate kind words and I'm honored to be able to help out ☺️
Best video around on correctly using a bowl gouge - thanks for sharing !
Glad you liked it 🤗
Excellent video. Definitely provided some ideas for ways to improve my bowl turning. These videos are really helpful. It would be interesting to see something in the future on rim design and considerations. Thanks for all the videos you are doing; you have a really good presentation and teaching style.
Thank you for suggestion, I'll write it on the list.... thank you very much 🤗
A great informative tutorial on sharpening and using bowl gouges. Thank you so much!
Thank you for watching 🤗
I use a variety of tools, many of them I made myself, that I use more than I use a bowl gouge. But I rarely turn a uniform blank like the one in the video. When I need a special tool I just make what I need. However this is an excellent tutorial for using a gouge 👍👌
Excellent lesson in complete bowl turning with tools and sharpening. Thank You.
Thank you for directing me to see this video. It answered many questions about sharpening tools and bowl turning. To date I have only done spindle turning, but this video encourages me to spread my wings.
No problem, thank you very much for watching
Fabulous, informative video Tomislav. I'm learning more with each of your posts... thanks!! 😁
WOW, what a great video full of so much detail. thank you for all your inspiration you’re a great teacher. Someday I hope to be able to turn as well as you. Thanks again
Thank you very much 😊
Its just practice and time
Brilliant video Tomislav, you are a born teacher. Thank you.
Thank you very much 🤗
Recently started learning turning and I've watched all of the people you've mentioned over the last few months. I think you've put together a good synthesis of all of their methods with good explanation.
Thank you sir very much 🤗
Outstanding method of teaching ! Amazing attention to detail. Helpful tips and tricks. Perfect camera position and angles. A genuine treasure for those trying to learn.
Thank you very much
Excellent tutorial, Tomislav, on the use of the bowl gouge. My son has started turning and will find this whole series of tutorials very helpful. Thank you for your gracious sharing of these with the rest of us!
Thank you and glad to hear that son likes to turn ss well ☺️
Nice job, Tomislav! Excellent presentation. I shall be sharing.
Excellent video today and I really learned a lot. It was beneficial to see the same cuts multiple times instead of just once and the camera angles were good. Thank you for passing along your knowledge.
Thank you very much 😀
Great lessons, you explain techniques better than I have seen in the past. Thans
Thank you 🤗
Well done T, I always learn a great deal from you. Thanks and stay safe.
Great instruction video! Thank you for sharing.
Another fantastic tutorial video. Your descriptions of gouge use are so clear and precise and I will refer back to these videos frequently to freshen my use of tools when I keep making novice errors.
Many thanks for your precious time you obviously put into these.
Thank you very much
Just fantastic with so many really useful insights, and so well presented - shout out to Sir Richard Raffan as well!
Thank you very much
Another fantastic lesson, thank you very much Tomislav. Off to the shed to practice now.
All the best and enjoy your time at the lathe
Another wonderful video. Your techniques remind me of Dennis White. Strong hands and a very light touch.
Thank you very much 🤗
Thanks again for another great explanation of how the tools work. I also follow Glenn Teague who equally well explains how both conventional gouges and his range of carbides cut. He makes a clear distinction between cutting and scraping and claims that applied correctly his carbides cut rather than scrape. To my mind, your and Richard’s application of “scrapers “ is not as a scraper, rather as a flat cutter using the burr as the blade primarily cutting the remaining side grain. Incidentally, I also enjoyed an earlier video on card “scrapers” and made a few from an old saw. I sometimes use these to refine the outside of my bowls as a a fine shear cutter. I believe that you were planning a follow up card scraping video and look forward to viewing it when it comes. Thanks again.
Thank you Peter, I do have how to sharpen card scraper but there is a great video from William Ng on TH-cam that shows that, excellent results
Your "ruined" grind reminded me of some of the botch jobs I did when starting. 🙂 I'm still no pro, but the sharpening process is a lot less intimidating now. Great videos, Tomislav! Thanks for sharing!
We have all been there, thank you for watching 🤗
Once again another excellent explanation.
Благодарю.Очень полезное видео.
Such a good video! So clear and full of excellent information. Thank you very much.
tres heureux d'avoir visionner votre vidéo vos explications et la camera est toujours bien place merci d'avoir partager. Un bon pédagogue.
Thank you very much
I just subscribed. Thanks for the woodturning tips. My wife and I are beginners at this, I have metal lathe experience as a retired mechanic, but woodturning has its own nuances that working with metal doesn't. Loved those bowls.
Thank you very much,I really appriciate your support
Good job on teaching bowl gouge cutting .thank you
Very informative. Thank you Tomislav
Excellent video.
Very helpful! Thank you!
Thank you for sharing your gift. Your videos are great training tools. I've enjoyed each of your videos!
Really appriciate that ☺️
Excellent video - just what I wanted to see = thank you. Tomislav you are a fine tutor
Thank you sir
Out standing. Your a great teacher. Thank you
Thank you very much 🤗
Nice video Tomislav! I'm going to watch it several times. Have a good day!
Thank you Terry, have a great day as well 😀
I started shaping some of my bowl gouges in this manner and it has been a game changer for me! I've been wanting to do it for quite some time and I am just now getting enough confidence in trying this grind. You are correct Tomislav in saying it might not look so good but it performs for me. The difference is rather remarkable! Thanks again for the videos you make. between your channel and Richard's I am always learning something. Can't take it all in at once though gotta let it digest a little. Lol. Thanks again Tomislav and hope you enjoy your day.
@@terryyancy3957 really glad to hear that Terry, that is the goal for this videos .... have a great day sir
Good demo I learn something every day thank you
Wonderful presentation, as a beginner this was very helpful.
Really appriciate that ☺️
That was an amazing tutorial. I loved all the tips and recommendations you shared. So very helpful, thank you!
Glad to hear that and thank you very much for watching and support what I do 🤗
Thanks!
Thank you sir very much,I really appriciate donation 🤗
Great instructional video Tomislav.
Thank you Jack😀
Tomislav such a great video so helpful hopefully I can get a bit quicker at bowl turning now. You were so like to have Richard Raffan as a mental.
Thank you very much, I think he helped out many as me,but it all comes down to practice and how much of those advises you want to hear.... I'm really gratefull to have Richard to guide especially in beginnings
This was really helpful. Your explanations are really logical ❤
Thank you very much
Excellent video
Thank you for this video. Realy nice demonstration!
Thank you 😀
Thank you for explaining everything. Great video.
Thank You for watching
Good information thank you I’ve watched it twice now learned each time ❤️
Glad to hear that, thank you
Another amazing video demonstration that has helped so much. Thank you for your time and expertise!!
Thank you very much for watching and support what I do 🤗
I learned a lot, thank you so much, Happy New Years I hope you have a great one.
Огромное спасибо за такое подробное видео.Я не точил со школы лет 30...вчера испортил три большие тарелки именно малым реером 10 мм..Эх пораньше бы посмотреть...Спасибо..
This was awesome thank you Tomislav
Thank You for watching
Very helpful video, Thanks so much. Love your tool control and finesse.
Thanks for watching 😀
🕶thank you Tomislav. Very good video.
Thank you Steven
I really like your technique and I will be watching your videos. Thanks 🎉
Thank you, appriciate that ☺️
Excellently done
I like how you use the scrapers.
Brilliant! Thank you for sharing your expertise.
Thank you for watching 🤗
Thanks, big help for this newbie....
No worries 😀
Great video! Thanks for taking the time to show this. God Bless
Thanks Tomaslav. Excellent how-to!!
Great video! I have a friend named Snezana. She talks a lot like you do. 😊
We do sound like villans in the american movies 😂
Very well done. Thanks!
Gracias amigo. Me gustaría ver esta clase magistral en Español. Igualmente he aprendido mucho. ¡Muchas gracias!
Brilliant explanations. Thank you.
Came back to add this: I’ve struggled since beginning my woodturning to understand how to effectively use a bowl gouge. I have two, but have been exclusively using my EasyWood tools with the carbide tips. Results were good, but tons of tear-out.
I watched your video, and the “open/closed” and numbering you demonstrated just CLICKED for me. I made a pretty awesome bowl after that, minimal tear-out! THANK YOU SO K”MUCH!!
Very informative video, thanks
Не знаю язык но все понимаю! Мне очень нравится. 😊
Glad to hear that sir 😉
Thanks, nice lesson video.
Great video, thank you
Great tutorial Tom! 😎
Thank you
Great training video - thanks
In Minute 24:50 you describe how to apply the forces with your left hand. At the beginning (and sometimes still now) I struggle not to apply pressure.
I have a suggestion for another video, focusing only on the force of the left hand:
1. Show the correct application of the push-cut again. Also do it with ONLY the right hand, if possible. This shows clearly, that the left hand theoretically is not needed. For fun I was thinking about hanging a weight with a string on the gauge to apply gravitational downward force and try to do the whole cut with only my right hand. ;-)
2. Show what happens if you apply pressure with your left hand to the wood (do it wrong). Make a full outside cut from base to rim. Show, how the bouncing gets worse and worse, the more you come to the rim of the bowl. Show the extreme bouncing with the camera close to the gouge tip, ideally in slow-motion. Put a black pen to the outside of the bowl. Stop the lathe to show the spirals that occured.
3. Show what to do, if the bouncing has startet (correction of a false start). My experience is, that you will nearly never get it under control when you try to restart the cut in the middle of the bowl. If the bevel ist riding on a bouncy surface, I never manage to make it better on the way up. The only successful ways for me (so far) was: a) start again at the very beginning, at the foot). b) take a scraper to remove the bounciness, then go back too the gouge. c) if I feel the boucing starting, I stop pushing forward completely and stay at the same spot for a few seconds to give the gouge time to get it round again, but this doesn't work very often and it leaves a visible line.
Thank you sir for suggestion, I took your comment and will see what I can do about it.... Also some of the idea you proposed is shown by Stuart Batty, great teacher , so I'll try to do it the best I can...
Thank you for watching
Thank you so much.
Hi Tomislav, that was a interesting way that you corrected you tool sharpening. your definitely not afraid of the push cut...lol. the clock theory was helpful. I do not have a chuck for bowl turning yet.
I believe you had the Record Power DM320 before which , is what I have now; do you know by chance the size of chuck for the DM320? I guess I should contact Record Power for advise. Thank you for the video. It got my interest now for bowl turning. Ken
Thank you very much Ken, mine was m33x3,5mm thread, I think its the standard on newer Record power lathes now
Another excellent video. I'm just starting to learn wood turning . Very clearly explained. You have such a wealth of knowledge. What grinding wheel is that and what grit. Thanks
Thank you very much,its cbn 180 grit , 200mm diameter
Great tutorial tommi, really well explained and demonstrated. Thanks for your time in producing these videos, I know it takes you away from your production turning, however rest assured and many other turners very much like and appreciate what you’re doing. Great bowls as well.I’d like to refer my trainees to these videos if that’s ok can I use this video and show trainees. I don’t want to breech any copyrights though.
Thanks tommi.
Thank you for watching and support what I do, sure not a problem showing video😀 as with this kind off stuff just give credit to the autor...
Great job explaining the techniques of using the bowl gouge. I have been following Richard for some time now and you can certainly see his expertise in your work. Would you mind telling me what course wheels you use on your grinder. And I’m assuming that you use a high speed grinder. Getting a grinder setup is my last obstacle to get started turning. Thanks.
Thank you Jim, Richard is my mentor so a lot of the stuff I learned from him.
I have full speed grinder, and 60 grit coarse wheel and on the right 100 grit cbn.
Great video learned a lot,what grit is the cbn wheel? Thanks
👍👍👍
31:00 For me as a beginner it makes sense to ONLY use the push-cut. Why? Because I still need practice, so using the push-cut to rough-shape the bowl I can train the correct position of my feet, the right feed rate and holding of the tool. When i come to the finish cut, I re-sharpen my gouge and with the practice of the rough cuts just 2 minutes before I find it easier to accomplish the finishing pass.
For a very experienced woodturner this surely is not neccessary anymore.
Nothing wrong going that route, that is the beauty of turning, so many ways of same results
Hvala Tomislav
Hvala ti ☺️