mouppe
Member
- Joined
- Feb 7, 2010
- Messages
- 3,036
The weight of the tool won't affect chatter- it's a light tool whatever its material. I have a couple of LV spokeshaves and I keep the mouth wide open at all times.
If you want a smooth cut with a spokeshave, I've found that using the tool in the right grain direction, making sure the blade is extremely sharp and skewing the tool in the cut where necessary are the three most important factors behind a good cut.
I don't follow your point on the mouth size and blade width tackling a small radius. If the curve is very tight, even a convex spokeshave may not be enough to get round the curve. I reach for the rasps at this point.
You may also want to grab a drawknife. I use it more often than a spokeshave to be honest.
If you want a smooth cut with a spokeshave, I've found that using the tool in the right grain direction, making sure the blade is extremely sharp and skewing the tool in the cut where necessary are the three most important factors behind a good cut.
I don't follow your point on the mouth size and blade width tackling a small radius. If the curve is very tight, even a convex spokeshave may not be enough to get round the curve. I reach for the rasps at this point.
You may also want to grab a drawknife. I use it more often than a spokeshave to be honest.