Hey Brad,
Thanks for the great link, and pictures.
I will defiantly consider that type of beveller!
Chris
Hey Brad,
Thanks for the great link, and pictures.
I will defiantly consider that type of beveller!
Chris
I have been using a Baginski beveler for the last 15 rods. Not a very steep learning curve but it gets a bit exciting when one forgets to sharpen the end of a strip. Also keep control of the strip as it is going through the beveler so it doesn't become a projectile. I am not particularly fast but I can (and have) split a culm and bevelled the 18 strips into acceptable 60* prisms in an hour and a half. I could be much faster but I am only working with a Harbor Freight motor and it tends to bog down if I try to take too much off or try to feed it too fast. I strongly recommend you find the 36 or 40 grit paper to make your wheels; I tried it at first with 80 grit and got a lot of burning of the strips and the paper. Go over to Clarks and there is a fellow over there who makes the wheels. Good luck on your journey.
formerly known as mcsteff (member since '98...)
Last edited by Catspaw; 04-27-2017 at 02:47 AM.