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Woodworking Magazine Weblog
Foot-powered Lathe and Scrollsaw
Posted 3/2/2009 in
All Weblog Posts
In the comments for
"One Schwarzpower. Fail."
Chris C. mentioned Roy Underhill's "Lathe from a Loft" article, which we ran in the October 2000 issue of
Popular Woodworking
. In this story, Roy used recycled lumber (read: he went dumpster diving, much to his daughter's embarrassment) to make a treadle lathe and scrollsaw. I've attached a PDF of the story below, for your reading and building pleasure.
— Megan Fitzpatrick, managing editor
TreadleLathe.pdf (1.69 MB)
Comments [9]
Monday, March 02, 2009 11:44:16 PM UTC
Thank you for providing the download - you guys are the best!
Mattias in Durham, NC
Tuesday, March 03, 2009 12:16:16 AM UTC
Sweet! Thanks Megan!
Jake
Tuesday, March 03, 2009 12:52:57 AM UTC
The timing couldn't be better. After attending Roy's class this past weekend I've decided I need a treadle lathe. A "measured drawing" who could ask for more?
Thank you Megan,
Frank
Frank
Tuesday, March 03, 2009 5:33:04 AM UTC
Woo! I needed something fun to look forward to after the lengthy (and non-productive) yak shaving today. Thank you!
CatX
Tuesday, March 03, 2009 3:57:42 PM UTC
This is a great article and results in a great lathe. I built one not long after the article was originally published and have used it for all of my lathe projects. It is a great lathe to learn with, as my children have also learned to turn on this lathe.
Dave Bozell
Tuesday, March 03, 2009 4:01:41 PM UTC
Yesterday, I got a Woodcraft mailing advertising a Nova lathe for something like $1699. Then I thought of a Craftsman Professional Lathe for something like $500, tools not included (another $100 or so). I'm not sure where in my neck of the woods (Fort Myers area) I can get a used lathe in reasonably good condition, and these days I'm far from willing to let too much money go out the door, so shipping charges are a no-no if I can avoid them.
After I clean out my garage and build some basic storage units (as well as my wife's piano book case and sofa table), this sounds like just the 'reward project' I need to keep my sanity. With that, I downloaded the PDF. Thanks a whole bunch!
Bruce Jackson
Tuesday, March 03, 2009 9:48:49 PM UTC
Meagan, thanks so much for posting this! I've been wanting to build a treadle lathe for some time, and I've searched all over for info. I never even knew this article had come out! Definitely informative, and a fine effort on Roy's part. Thanks again!
Steve Kreitler
Wednesday, March 04, 2009 2:36:26 PM UTC
Thanks for the pdf. I have been looking for treadle lathe plans for the last 6 months and have not been successful with my Google search. Having plans for one build by an "expert" in the field is very helpful. I have a powered lathe and am concerned about letting my grandkids use it. Once I have the treadle lathe built, they can work along side grandpa to experience the joys of turning.
As a faculty member at Central Michigan University, I am always looking for items like the treadle lathe to help future woodworking teachers understand where today's technology came from. Now I can concentrate finding good plans for a Pole Lathe like the one Roy U. uses in his PBS shop.
Alan Papendick
Monday, March 09, 2009 12:45:33 PM UTC
Ambitious reader Nathan Pettigrew has sent a SketchUp model of the lathe, and it is now on Google's 3D Warehouse in the "Popular Woodworking and Woodworking Magazine" collection. Copy and paste this lengthy url:
http://sketchup.google.com/3dwarehouse/details?mid=f44766036ec8d67e738e43095496b061
or you can find it on the 3D Warehouse with their search.
Bob Lang
Bob Lang
Comments are closed.
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