Anyone See Roy Underhill on Saturday?

It was the national feed, with a woodcarver. Roy was trying to push a gouge uphill, getting some fuzz, and asked the carver how he knew when to change directions.

The carver replied, "the wood is the teacher your always have with you."

I think it's functionally the same as cutting the wood "as it wishes to be cut." By Frank Pain.

The wood will let you know how you're doing. When you don't have to press, you're doing it right!

Reply to
George
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Even though Alabama originated the idea of Public Television, or so they claim, their coverage of things woodworking is spotty at best. At times they will carry several shows and "bam" with no warning, all you can get is "The Router Workshop" and "handy Mam."

You said this was on a national feed, exactly what did you mean by that? To be honest, I am going into a "Woodwright's Shop" withdrawal and need a fix.

Deb

Reply to
Dr. Deb

"Dr. Deb" wrote in news: snipped-for-privacy@corp.supernews.com:

If you have sattelite television, and if you are in an area where the 'local' stations are not available on the sattelite service, then you can get the feed that the networks send to their affiliates. Otherwise, these are blocked, and you get the local channels.

The 'local channels' are rather regionally defined. On cable, for example, we got three PBS channels. On DirecTV, we get 8 or 9, maybe more. Certainly all we need. Add in HGTV & DIY, and you HAVE TO HAVE TiVo to deal with it.

If you are in the lower 48, check

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and input your zip code for information local to you.

BTW, I haven't seen where Roy has sent out many new shows, but I could be wrong. He's one of my favorites.

Patriarch

Reply to
Patriarch

Patriarch pretty much says it. We're DirecTV, and the local PBS affiliate (which does not carry Roy) tower is about 70 miles away. Qualifies as no local, though the NBC affiliate, whose tower is a thousand yards from the PBS tower, doesn't. Output is the same.

If you're an aficionado, you need to read his book on public speaking. It's a hoot, until you realize how well done it is underneath. More or less like the shows themselves.

I always like it when he goes to the lathe, because he's had that same oak toolrest since the show started, and we get so many comments here about dented _steel_ rests.

Reply to
George

SNIP>>>>>>>>

======================= Think maybe he has a little HSS rod embedded in the top of the rest?? (:-)

Ken Moon Webberville, TX.

Reply to
Ken Moon

On Wed, 11 May 2005 3:34:49 -0700, George wrote

i wonder if Roy roughs out many 20" bowls on that lathe

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Reply to
neill

Dunno, but in a shop of antiques and reproductions, that's a Sears carbon steel turning set that he uses. Bet he doesn't use that lathe much off-camera, though. It's at a back-breaking height.

Reply to
George

Roy's on a roll. I haven't seen any stitched up fingers or blue finger nails lately.

Reply to
Joe

My past comments were about denting _cast iron_ tool rests with HSS. I just tried an oak toolrest, but it dented as easily as cast iron. I'm going back to steel or steel reinforced rests. Best for using hard tools held in ham fists. :)

Actually, avoiding dents in a wooden rest might be a good way for learning to make gentle cuts that in the end probably get things done quicker. Aggressive tooling is quick and has a certain satisfaction, but do we pay a price later by having to correct a damaged surface?

Further OT, but I'm sure Roy doesn't mind, I have a question about final tooling. It's said that a final surface gently scraped with sharp tools might look and feel better than if cut, but scraped fibers make it much more difficult to get a good sanded finish. What's yall's experience?

Turn to Safety, Arch Fortiter

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Reply to
Arch

If you accept that what constitutes a scraped surface is one in which the edge does not come perpendicularly across the fibers - severing them - but at some broader angle, then some fibers are crushed and torn of necessity. Matter of degree, but if you grab and tear, you do deeper damage. It will take longer to get below it by use of the eighty grit gouge.

What I find most distressing is compression. You know, that part where you're making the turn into a steeper bottoming cut and rub the bevel hard against the wood. Leaves that darker, burnished area before finishing, a lighter area by rejecting finish afterward. I think cherry is one of the worst offenders, probably because the heated resin consolidates the area beyond simple surface burnishing. Even water won't swell the fibers up to where a sanding will easily make the area the same as surrounding non-crushed areas. Colossal PITA.

Peel, don't pound!

Reply to
George

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