Beat me to it...99, change
Won’t it just force all the contents to settle at one end?
Okay then - you spelt criticisms wrong
Yes the back gear was in action.Select the back gear if the lathe has one so the agitation balls can do their job.
The Mk 2 is going to paint bulls eyes on targets.What are you spraying, Frisbees?
The ball does the stirring when run slowly.I'm not sure it would be effective, it wouldn't bring the solids in from the ends.
Coulda gone down to around 40 rpm but found that around 90rpm was fine.If you can get the speed down low enough so the agitators move around then don't see why not
How slow does it go
Now that I like!Last one:
I think this one's a goer. Firmly held 6mm rod in tailstock chuck. Loosely fits into offset short tube in chuck, attach the can however you like.
Should actually even work...
The time it took to draw those you could have well shaken every aerosol in Halfrauds.Last one:
I think this one's a goer. Firmly held 6mm rod in tailstock chuck. Loosely fits into offset short tube in chuck, attach the can however you like.
Should actually even work...
The time it took to draw those you could have well shaken every aerosol in Halfrauds.
Oh yes, I designed my whole house in Sketchup some ten years ago, inside and out. It’s an excellent toolThat's the beauty of Sketchup, it's a very quick process. A few minutes each, most of which being the time it takes to find a lathe looking thing so that I can more easily explain the concept to someone else. Then there's a bit of iterative design once I can see what the idea looks like myself. Once you know what it is you want, it literally takes seconds (and I had already made a Colchester model for the MotoGP Shed™ I suddenly remembered).
Then just screenshot it, upload to a picture hosting service, link to it in a post so that I can invite criticism upon myself.
Something like that I would draw the full end cross section, then draw the profile/shape of the back splash, then pull it out to the length required. I’ve not used it for quite a while myself, but I found that learning the ‘hot keys’ was by far the best tip I had.I only happen to have a hack model of a Colchester Student so that I could Sketchup a home made back panel for it and see how it fits in the shed.
Quite a tricky 3d problem to solve otherwise but I just made up a net in Sketchup and cut the pattern as per drawing. Worked a treat.