charlie b asks. "What say you?"
I say, thanks for asking, Charlie. I couldn't agree more with your premise. Your list of "variations on a round & brown theme" as with all your contributions to woodturning here and elsewhere goads us into thinking beyond the R&B baseline along with you. Well, a little behind you. :)
I say it's a good thing to push beyond the limits of our fixed headstocks, in line spindles and hand held freely applied cutting tools. True, the "standard" machines, tools and techniques in most of our shops continue to offer tremendous opportunities for innovative art/craft and are nowhere near the limit of their possibitities, but there was a time of almost no face turning and spindles ruled, not that far removed from the days of the bodgers. Woodturning must grow or it will shrivel.
Maybe there is no limit with using what we have in our shops today, especially with the adaptions of readily available ancillary modes and devices such as charlie's use of electo-mechanical aids to stretch the limits. That said, I wonder if it's not time to consider making equipment from other turning disciplines affordable additions to our present armament. I mean cross slides, various automatic feeds, tilting and thrusting headstocks, programmable chucks, ornamental devices etc. etc. Why not? Probably cost.
If common in our shops they could/would/might refresh our hobby. ...or just maybe I'm in my periodic "burn-out phase" and woodturning doesn't need refreshing and traditionally as is will do very well without my eccentric off center mechanical ideas. :)
Turn to Safety, Arch Fortiter
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