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Thread: Work holding without a chuck

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  1. If you can get your hands on a face plate or two, that will be a good option for bowls and platters..........it just takes a little more wood so that you have room to put the screws in and then turn away the holes in finishing off the bottoms. Perhaps a call to your closest wood turning club could get you hooked up with other turners who might have an extra they would not mind you borrowing for a while until you can get your own.

    Generally speaking, wood turners are good and generous folks.
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  2. #2
    +1 on using faceplates
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  3. #3
    Join Date
    Dec 2010
    Location
    Willow Spring, NC
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    A cheap faceplate, some waste blocks, and a load of hot glue is enough to turn just about anything if you're creative enough.

  4. #4
    Quote Originally Posted by Marty Eargle View Post
    A cheap faceplate, some waste blocks, and a load of hot glue is enough to turn just about anything if you're creative enough.

    Meaning the waste block gets screwed to face plate and glued to the piece being turned?
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  5. #5
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    Dec 2010
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    Yes sir. It certainly doesn't make things as easy as having a chuck, but I've turned many bowls and boxes that way. You can also have a larger, rounded waste block to use for friction turning to finish the bottoms of things.

  6. #6
    If you want to turn endgrain pieces, you can also use what is called a "glue chuck", which is merely a waste block screwed to the faceplate, and a mortise turned (or drilled) into it. Then the workpiece is turned between centers to get a tenon, which is then glued into the mortise on the faceplate/waste block. Needs to be fairly substantial mortise and tenon though. Don't attempt screwing into endgrain with your faceplate. Not a good thing...

    And invest in a good faceshield.
    Last edited by Jim Underwood; 02-24-2012 at 1:51 PM.
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  7. #7
    Join Date
    Jan 2008
    Location
    Chicago Heights, Il.
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    If you have a 1x8 thread on the headstock spindle you can use a common 1" nut and a large flat washer to make a faceplate. There are some others that are common threads also.
    Member Illiana Woodturners

  8. #8
    Bob, Thanks, It is a 1x8 spindle, I didn't realize that that was a common size for bolts and that I could just buy nuts off the shelf that would fit. With a bit of welding that opens up lots of options for me.
    Universal M-300 (35 Watt CO2)
    Universal X-660 (50 Watt CO2)

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  9. #9
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    Bangor, PA
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    Joe,
    What is your spindle size and thread?
    faust

  10. #10
    I just measured a face plate that I have that is the same size but to fine a thread so I think that the spindle on my lathe is 3/4 x 10, the threads on the 4 jaw chuck I have are 8x1 and the threads on the face plate are 3/4x something more than 10.
    Last edited by Joe Hillmann; 02-24-2012 at 2:25 PM.
    Universal M-300 (35 Watt CO2)
    Universal X-660 (50 Watt CO2)

    Hans (35 watt YAG)
    Electrox Cobra (40 watt YAG)


    Glass With Class, Cameron, Wisconsin

  11. #11
    Join Date
    Feb 2009
    Location
    Fort Collins, CO
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    946
    Jerry Mercantel's chuck plate is ingenious. In the tutorial he shows how he mounts it via a scroll chuck, however, it would be easy to adapt to a faceplate, or even thread it to fit your spindle. I'm sure you can find a way to attach it securely.
    Man advances just in proportion that he mingles thought with his labor. - Ingersoll

  12. #12
    Join Date
    Dec 2007
    Location
    Hellertown PA
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    143
    I turned my 1st ever bowl with the faceplate that i screwed a waste block onto then used just regular yellow wood glue with a brown paper bag in between the project wood and waste block and it held well. Then you can just break them apart. I still have that bowl.. About 40 years ago. Carl

  13. #13
    Join Date
    Oct 2009
    Location
    McMinnville, Tennessee
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    Have not heard from J.P. Rapattoni in a long time but he had been turning for many years and never had a chuck the last time I talked to him. Do a Google search and you should find some of his work.


    Sid
    Sid Matheny
    McMinnville, TN

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