Wichman Posted September 2, 2019 Report Posted September 2, 2019 I have an order for a set of wedding rings from solid walnut. I have the pattern form Steve Goods site, but shaping the rings by hand is really tedious. So the brain finally kicked in and I thought if I could get a compression plug the right size....nope, too big. So then it hit me that I could make my own, so here goes. I used a#10 x 2" machine screw two washers and two nuts (one for a jam nut). I bought a sponge I thought was a good thickness. I then cut a small piece of sponge (about 1" x 1") and pushed the screw though the center. Set the ring on the sponge, tighten the nuts and voile, a compression mandrel to hold the ring while I shape it. Used a sanding block and chucked the mandrel into a cordless drill. Tomorrow I'll try it on the drill press. I need to make a couple of bracelets as well, tomorrow I'll look for the largest bolt/fender washer combo I can find. OCtoolguy, NC Scroller and Be_O_Be 2 1 Quote
Be_O_Be Posted September 2, 2019 Report Posted September 2, 2019 Great idea @Wichman. I made some bracelets for my grand daughters using a pair of hole saws, 2.5" inside & 3" outside, some I just left square. These will fit a thin wrist. Sam777 and OCtoolguy 1 1 Quote
Wichman Posted September 2, 2019 Author Report Posted September 2, 2019 58 minutes ago, Be_O_Be said: Great idea @Wichman. I made some bracelets for my grand daughters using a pair of hole saws, 2.5" inside & 3" outside, some I just left square. These will fit a thin wrist. I cut some bracelets using hole saws, but the cut was so rough I gave up on them. What kind of hole saw did you use? Speed? How much sanding? FYI. those are very nice. Be_O_Be and OCtoolguy 2 Quote
OCtoolguy Posted September 2, 2019 Report Posted September 2, 2019 13 hours ago, Wichman said: I have an order for a set of wedding rings from solid walnut. I have the pattern form Steve Goods site, but shaping the rings by hand is really tedious. So the brain finally kicked in and I thought if I could get a compression plug the right size....nope, too big. So then it hit me that I could make my own, so here goes. I used a#10 x 2" machine screw two washers and two nuts (one for a jam nut). I bought a sponge I thought was a good thickness. I then cut a small piece of sponge (about 1" x 1") and pushed the screw though the center. Set the ring on the sponge, tighten the nuts and voile, a compression mandrel to hold the ring while I shape it. Used a sanding block and chucked the mandrel into a cordless drill. Tomorrow I'll try it on the drill press. I need to make a couple of bracelets as well, tomorrow I'll look for the largest bolt/fender washer combo I can find. That is fantastic. I never would have thought of that. Thanks for sharing. Quote
Wichman Posted September 2, 2019 Author Report Posted September 2, 2019 So today I went looking for hardware. At HD I found and arbor adapter and fender washers that make the bracelets so much easier, same basic concept as the rings just a larger diameter, turned the drill press down to 400 rpm due to the diameter. OCtoolguy and Be_O_Be 1 1 Quote
Be_O_Be Posted September 2, 2019 Report Posted September 2, 2019 Definitely like your way of thinking, necessity is the mother of inventions. After I had read your post describing the arbor you made, one of the things that popped in my head was to use a rubber grommet from a cord grip or a small bushing, I think the washers would expand it just enough. 8 hours ago, Wichman said: What kind of hole saw did you use? Speed? How much sanding? The hole saws are Milwaukee, 400rpm. I backed out the pins on the arbor and let the bit sit flat against the arbor, eliminates the wobble, adjustable pliers to change out the saw. I cut 4" stock and screw it in 4 corners to a waste table on the drill press & 2 screws in the center area to hold the plug. I cut the outside first then the inside and that left the bracelet on the smaller saw. 220 grit disc sander for the outside & spindle sander inside. Found some small buffing pads at HF that I worked inside and used Beall buffing on the out. OCtoolguy 1 Quote
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