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Thread: Bird Feeder

  1. #1
    Join Date
    Mar 2005
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    Middlefield
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    Bird Feeder

    Sorry about the rotten picture. This is just a walnut bird feeder. The "glass" is actually quartz. I got a pile of quartz cylinders from an industrial quartz outfit and just turned two 6 inch pieces to fit it. This quartz didn't cut well on my diamond saw. Gonna have to come up with a better cylinder.

    Anyway...The birds probably won't care what the quartz looks like.

    Found a long bolt and bent a hook into it....ran it all the way through so filling with bird seed is just undoing the bolt and filling up the cylinder.

    Oh...and it's sitting on a wormy pear platter that I turned about 15 years ago when I first started turning.
    birdfeeder.jpg
    ~john
    "There's nothing wrong with Quiet" ` Jeremiah Johnson

  2. #2
    Join Date
    Feb 2008
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    E TN, near Knoxville
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    Quote Originally Posted by John Hart View Post
    Sorry about the rotten picture. This is just a walnut bird feeder. The "glass" is actually quartz. I got a pile of quartz cylinders from an industrial quartz outfit and just turned two 6 inch pieces to fit it. This quartz didn't cut well on my diamond saw. Gonna have to come up with a better cylinder.
    "Just" a bird feeder? Man, I love functional turnings! (Well I like the art too, but form + function has a special appeal.)

    An idea - instead of cutting the semicircle in the quartz how about turning a raised cylinder with a groove to fit the quartz rim and make the seed cutouts in the wood instead?

    And quartz cylinders? Zounds, what a find! I don't know where Middlefield is but I'm tempted load a bunch of turning wood and stuff in the car, find it and twist your, er, talk you into, er, negotiate a trade. :-) How about some nice titanium tubing? Big chunk of HDPE? Red or purple cast acrylic? A pretty block of Cocobolo?

    I don't know if this could be adapted to cutting tubing, but years ago in the Lab we needed some thin flat quartz pieces cut into circles to make windows into a high-temperature experimental gizmo. I used an old glass-cutting trick that none of my collegues had heard of - I submerged the quartz sheet in a sink full of water and cut it with a heavy duty pair of scissors. Worked like a charm. The way I understand it, the water fills micro stress cracks as they form and the molecular "glue" inhibits the cracks from propagating. Cut with scissors in the air, a glass sheet will shatter - under water you can cut straight lines, curves, etc. I wonder if some sort of saw could cut the quartz more cleanly under water. I'll have to ask my buddy Joe; he knows everything.

    JKJ

  3. #3
    Join Date
    Mar 2005
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    Middlefield
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    Zounds? I haven't heard that since Scooby Doo!! Or was that Zoinks?

    Hey...I'd be happy to send you some quartz stuff. No need for a trade....although the acrylic did sound pretty enticing. Just PM me with your address John, and I'll throw some stuff in a box.

    And by the way....the water idea does sound plausible. Gonna give that a try. I was sawing dry and my diamond saw has a water reservoir that I probably should have used. Dopey me.
    ~john
    "There's nothing wrong with Quiet" ` Jeremiah Johnson

  4. #4
    Join Date
    Feb 2012
    Location
    Haubstadt (Evansville), Indiana
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    John like the feeder idea. However that platter has some nice character. If I turned a bird feeder my wife would want 5-6, one for every tree. I enjoy seeing all of your work.

    JKJ, someday I'll come across something that I could trade you. I would drive to Tennessee just to see your shop. Right now I am turning "firewood", but I am happy to be turning. You sometimes get some interesting pieces from firewood.
    When working I had more money than time. In retirement I have more time than money. Love the time, miss the money.

  5. #5
    Join Date
    Mar 2005
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    Quote Originally Posted by William C Rogers View Post
    John like the feeder idea. However that platter has some nice character.......You sometimes get some interesting pieces from firewood.
    Thanks William - Here's the original thread from 11 years ago and my worm guts platter

    http://www.sawmillcreek.org/showthre...ight=worm+pear

    I love turning firewood. Somehow seems like you accomplished more for some reason. Warm weather coming...looks like I'll have to turn this whole pile instead of burn it
    february_vase.jpg
    ~john
    "There's nothing wrong with Quiet" ` Jeremiah Johnson

  6. #6
    Join Date
    Feb 2012
    Location
    Haubstadt (Evansville), Indiana
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    [QUOTE=John Hart;2666876]

    I love turning firewood. Somehow seems like you accomplished more for some reason. Warm weather coming...looks like I'll have to turn this whole pile instead of burn it
    february_vase.jpg[/QUOTE

    Your firewood pileblooks better than mine!
    When working I had more money than time. In retirement I have more time than money. Love the time, miss the money.

  7. #7
    Join Date
    Feb 2008
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    E TN, near Knoxville
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    Quote Originally Posted by John Hart View Post
    ...the acrylic did sound pretty enticing.
    I find the acrylic fun to turn. What I have is 1.5" in diameter in various colors. I use short pieces to make things like this:

    acrylic_ornaments_A_comp.jpg acrylic_top_yellow_small.jpg aluminum_brass_plastic_small.jpg ornament_green_IMG_5716.jpg acrylic_ornament_green_bell.jpg

    I understand it has to be CAST acrylic or it will melt rather than cut cleanly. I use standard tools, Thompson spindle gouges, the small Hunter Hercules.

    I don't remember exactly what I have left but I'll check. I wish I had more of the green. (The piece I used for the bell was so dark it looked black before I turned it thin.)

    JKJ

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