Zeddedhed
Established Member
I'm about to dive into the world of turning with a new lathe arriving in a couple of weeks.
I've ordered the requisite Keith Rowley Foundation Course book and have dusted off a full face shield.
I'm looking at getting some tooling and specifically want to buy through Amazon (I have a load of credit with them from using a credit card)
I've seen this set by Faithfull
Here's the spec:
Faithfull HSS Turning Chisel Wooden Boxed Set 8Pc FAIWCTSET8B
Turning chisels for use on woodturning lathes.
Manufactured from High Speed Steel, these chisels will perform well in both hard and soft woods. They maintain a sharp cutting edge much longer than their carbon steel equivalents, requiring less time being re-sharpened
They are fitted with full sized contoured walnut handles for user comfort and brass ferrules.
Overall length: 420 mm.
Length of blade: 160 mm.
Set of 8 woodturning tools supplied in a wooden box.
15mm Diamond Point Scraper
15mm Plain Skew Chisel
25mm Plain Skew Chisel
15mm Parting Tool
15mm Round Nose Scraper
8mm Roughing Out Chisel
16mm Roughing Out Chisel
20mm Roughing Out Chisel
And then there is this set from R SOrby:
With this spec:
This set comprises six of Robert Sorby's core range.
Each set consists of the following
3/4" Spindle roughing gouge - turns square to round, a real work horse.
3/8" Spindle gouge - details spindle work.
3/8" Bowl gouge - makes light work of the hardest material and will quickly turn bowls.
3/4" Standard skew chisel - superb for spindle work e.g. newel posts and table legs.
1/8" Parting tool - for parting off work and great for detailing.
1/2" Round scraper - just the job for bowls and platters
Would I be correct in thinking that although the Sorby set is less chisels for more money it would represent better value?
I've ordered the requisite Keith Rowley Foundation Course book and have dusted off a full face shield.
I'm looking at getting some tooling and specifically want to buy through Amazon (I have a load of credit with them from using a credit card)
I've seen this set by Faithfull
Here's the spec:
Faithfull HSS Turning Chisel Wooden Boxed Set 8Pc FAIWCTSET8B
Turning chisels for use on woodturning lathes.
Manufactured from High Speed Steel, these chisels will perform well in both hard and soft woods. They maintain a sharp cutting edge much longer than their carbon steel equivalents, requiring less time being re-sharpened
They are fitted with full sized contoured walnut handles for user comfort and brass ferrules.
Overall length: 420 mm.
Length of blade: 160 mm.
Set of 8 woodturning tools supplied in a wooden box.
15mm Diamond Point Scraper
15mm Plain Skew Chisel
25mm Plain Skew Chisel
15mm Parting Tool
15mm Round Nose Scraper
8mm Roughing Out Chisel
16mm Roughing Out Chisel
20mm Roughing Out Chisel
And then there is this set from R SOrby:
With this spec:
This set comprises six of Robert Sorby's core range.
Each set consists of the following
3/4" Spindle roughing gouge - turns square to round, a real work horse.
3/8" Spindle gouge - details spindle work.
3/8" Bowl gouge - makes light work of the hardest material and will quickly turn bowls.
3/4" Standard skew chisel - superb for spindle work e.g. newel posts and table legs.
1/8" Parting tool - for parting off work and great for detailing.
1/2" Round scraper - just the job for bowls and platters
Would I be correct in thinking that although the Sorby set is less chisels for more money it would represent better value?