File:Spiral turning lathe (Carpentry and Joinery, 1925).jpg
No file by this name exists.
Summary
<wm-license-information-description> | Fig. 10 A lathe for turning spirals, as commonly seen on table legs in the "Jacobean" or "Barley sugar" reproduction styles, particularly popular in the 1920s. Cutting is done by a small rotating cutter in a tilted head. As the work revolves slowly in the lathe, a leadscrew (as for a screwcutting lathe) or in this case a rack arrangement traverses the workpiece axially, beneath the fixed cutter. |
||
---|---|---|---|
<wm-license-information-date> | |||
<wm-license-information-source> |
Scan from Ednie, John (editor) (1925). Carpentry and Joinery. Carpentry and Joinery (Vol. IV ed.). London: Gresham Publishing. pp. p. 56,fig. 10. | ||
<wm-license-information-author> |
Andy Dingley (scanner) | ||
<wm-license-information-permission> ([[<wm-license-information-permission-reusing-link>|<wm-license-information-permission-reusing-text>]]) |
|
File usage
There are no pages that link to this file.