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Thread: Jerry Marcantel, Chuck Plate

  1. #1
    Join Date
    Feb 2010
    Location
    Hanover, Ontario
    Posts
    405

    Jerry Marcantel, Chuck Plate

    Hi All,
    I had a chance to make one of these this afternoon and it is FANTASTIC.
    I put a small piece of Walnut on the chuck on the bark side and it was easy to position and balance. It holds just great. Particularly well for NE bowls.
    Very nice, Jerry, thanks for posting this idea.
    Peter F.

    Pic two shows the NE bowl partially done on the ways of my lathe.
    Attached Images Attached Images

  2. #2
    Join Date
    Dec 2010
    Location
    Toronto, CA
    Posts
    320
    A few years ago I was looking for a large drive spur and someone here tipped me off to these.
    I've used them most the time since. Cheap, powerful, never get any slippage and easy to make.

    I had two sizes: 3" and 5"
    Any larger blanks were bolted onto a big face plate. Then I spun up a large piece and found screw holes in bowl. So figured "why not go big?" on these.
    I made one 12" and screwed it to an 8" face plate. Spun up a 80 lbs piece without any issues.

    And its easy to get the plate off the wood when you finish roughing.

  3. #3
    Thanks for posting! As much as I surf the web for turning stuff, I've never run across that. Brilliant! I love low tech solutions...

  4. #4
    Join Date
    Oct 2006
    Location
    Harvey, Michigan
    Posts
    20,804
    I have one of the first ones Jerry ever made and I still use it faithfully! Thanks Jerry!! Have turned chunks of wood that are close to 100 pounds - NO problem at all!

    For anyone interested in making one, here is Jerry's How-To article: Chuck Plate
    Steve

    “You never know what you got til it's gone!”
    Please don’t let that happen!
    Become a financial Contributor today!

  5. #5
    Join Date
    Feb 2008
    Location
    lufkin tx
    Posts
    2,054
    This does work well. Also a wood chuck plate with various grades of sticky-back sandpaper works well with lighter pieces of wood. An example would be a 1" board for a lid. Clamp up and cut a reverse dovetail for a chuck grab. Stay out of the danger line naturally. Any marks are easily sanded down. Holds moreweight than you might think. Good tailstock pressure is welcome here.

  6. #6
    thanks Jerry....works great

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