
Dave returned home from the conference charged with enthusiasm and built a boring bar set up so that he could start making hollow vessels. Frank Sudol uses wet birch for his deep hollow vessels and a light bulb on the boring bar near the cutter. Frank judges wall thickness by the density of the light showing through the wall of the vessel. It must work for him, because he turns vessels with 1/16th inch wall thicknesses. Frank notes that darker woods prevent the use of this method of judging wall thickness.
The light inside impressed Dave, but it also got him
to thinking. If you can use a light inside to help determine wall thickness,
why not use a light beam on the outside for the same purpose. Of course,
you need a very condensed light beam that is no bigger than the tip of
your cutting tool. Enter the laser pointer. The laser pointer has a very
condensed beam of red light and seemed to offer what Dave needed.

Now, how do you make this work. He deduced, if you
mount the laser pointer above the work, but pointed onto the very edge
of the cutter and if you could keep your tool level so that the pointer
would hit the workpiece on the outside to indicate where the cutter was
on the inside, you would know where your cutter was inside the hollow vessel
at all times. The boring bar that Dave had built would provide the stability
needed. The laser pointer would provide the light beam.

With a $16.00 laser pointer and miscellaneous handrail
fittings and boat hardware, Dave added a laser pointer to his boring bar.
The pointer was mounted high enough to clear the workpiece and adjusted
to point directly onto the tip of his cutting tool. He was ready togive
it a try.
Dave says, that he has only turned pieces with walls
down to 1/8 inch thick, but sees no reason why one couldn’t make them thinner.
He says that he simply hasn’t yet had the nerve to go ahead and cut through
the wall.

With any thin walled hollow vessel, one must final turn the outside of the workpiece so that you can accurately judge the thickness of the walls. As mentioned, Frank Sudol uses a light inside his vessels and judges the brightness to maintain a uniform wall thickness. Dave Thompson’s laser beam makes this a bit easier. You don’t have to be able to judge the brightness of the light showing through the wall of your vessel to determine your wall thickness. You just look where the laser beam is falling. If the beam is set on the cutter’s edge and it goes over the side of the wood, expect a breakthrough, big time!
As long as you use a boring bar set up or some other
method of holding your tool in a stable position to keep the laser pointer
directly above the cutter’s edge, there is no reason why this method of
judging wall thickness will not work on deep hollowed vessels or even simple
bowls.
Another such application of the laser pointer to determine
location of the cutter is the McNaughton Center Saver System. Dave found
that by clamping his laser pointer onto the handle of the McNaughton Center
Saver and aiming the beam onto the end of the cutter, he was able to tell
exactly where his cutter was in the blank at all times. He could tell,
for example, exactly when to stop cutting and pop out the center. This
application of a laser beam to the McNaughton System should greatly simplify
its use.


The application of the boring bar used by Frank Sudol and Lyle Jamieson and the laser beam wall thickness measuring device devised by Dave Thompson,will make deep hollowing and thin walled vessels much easier. It is quite likely that we will begin seeing a lot more deep-hollowed, thin-walled turnings in Instant Galleries. Imagine what the Instant Gallery at the AAW Conference in 2000 and 2001 will bring!