As a welding instructor for many years I also taught the apprentice the same principle: start in a slightly uncomfortable position and finish in a comfortable one. Makes all the difference. One other one is grip pressure. Too much and your control is limited. What I would do is shake their hand with the amount of pressure I felt was correct.
Thanks! This was the year I decided to really focus more on turning -- learning the techniques and skills, rather than focusing just on the final product. I can do that, with scraping and lots of sanding -- but there's a better way.
I feel like I’m standing at two roads diverged, one leading to a set of scrapers, the other to a skew. I hope this will help me pick the correct path.
Hang in there!
Quite helpful, thank you!
As a welding instructor for many years I also taught the apprentice the same principle: start in a slightly uncomfortable position and finish in a comfortable one. Makes all the difference. One other one is grip pressure. Too much and your control is limited. What I would do is shake their hand with the amount of pressure I felt was correct.
Thanks for all your advice Peet
Nick
Thanks Pete, what great advice. Looking forward to the next parts.
Cheers,
Michael
Thanks! This was the year I decided to really focus more on turning -- learning the techniques and skills, rather than focusing just on the final product. I can do that, with scraping and lots of sanding -- but there's a better way.
Thank so much!
This is so great--Thank you, Pete!