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Building a Pole Lathe for Green Wood Turning — Spring-Pole Reciprocating Lathe
Woody

Oluşturan

Woody

14. Mayıs 2026NO
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Building a Pole Lathe for Green Wood Turning — Spring-Pole Reciprocating Lathe

Construct a foot-powered pole lathe from green timber using only hand tools. A springy overhead pole provides the return stroke while the operator's foot drives the treadle. The workpiece spins in alternating directions — the turner cuts only on the downstroke. This was the standard tool of English bodgers (itinerant chair-leg turners) from at least the 13th century, remaining in professional use into the 1950s. Green (unseasoned) wood is preferred because it cuts easily and finished pieces are turned oversize to account for shrinkage.
Orta
8-12 hours

Talimatlar

1

Select a Spring Pole

Choose a straight ash or birch sapling approximately 3 to 4 metres long and 40 millimetres in diameter at the base. The pole must flex freely without cracking — ash is the traditional first choice because it bends predictably and springs back with consistent force. Avoid dead or seasoned wood, which is brittle and will snap under repeated flexing. A live-cut sapling retains the moisture that makes the fibres elastic.

Bu adım için malzemeler:

Ash Wood Log SectionAsh Wood Log Section1 adet
2

Fell and Trim the Sapling

Cut the sapling at the base with an axe. Trim all side branches flush with the trunk using a hatchet, working from base to tip so the blade follows the grain direction. Leave the bark on — it protects the wood fibres and slows drying, which preserves the pole's springiness for months of use.

Gerekli aletler:

AxeAxe
HatchetHatchet
3

Test the Pole Flexibility

Rest the thick end of the pole on a support at chest height and press down on the thin tip. The pole should flex at least 300 millimetres and spring back smartly when released. If it stays bent, creaks, or shows longitudinal cracks, discard it and select another. A good spring pole will endure tens of thousands of cycles before needing replacement.

4

Rive Two Bed Rails from Oak

Split a green oak log lengthwise using wedges and a mallet to produce two rails approximately 1500 millimetres long, 100 millimetres wide, and 75 millimetres thick. Riving (splitting along the grain) produces stronger rails than sawing because the split follows the natural fibre direction without severing fibres. Oak is chosen for the bed because it resists wear from the sliding poppets and holds peg holes without crumbling.

Bu adım için malzemeler:

Hardwood Logs (Oak, Maple, Beech)Hardwood Logs (Oak, Maple, Beech)1 adet

Gerekli aletler:

Splitting AxeSplitting Axe
Wooden Felling Wedge
Wooden MalletWooden Mallet
5

Flatten the Bed Rail Surfaces

Clamp each rail and use a drawknife to shave the top face and the inner face (the side facing the other rail) flat and smooth. The poppets must slide along these surfaces without catching. Work with the grain to avoid tearing the fibres. Functional flatness is sufficient — the surface does not need to be polished.

Gerekli aletler:

DrawknifeDrawknife
6

Bore Poppet-Peg Holes Along the Bed Rails

Using a hand auger, bore a row of holes 20 millimetres in diameter along the top face of each bed rail, spaced approximately 75 millimetres apart and centred on the width. These holes accept the locking pegs that hold the poppets at the required spacing for each workpiece length. Bore cleanly through the full thickness so pegs can be driven from above and tapped out from below.

Gerekli aletler:

Earth AugerEarth Auger
7

Shape Two Poppets from Oak

From two blocks of oak approximately 300 millimetres tall and 100 millimetres square, shape each poppet into a flat-based upright with two downward tenons at the base. The tenons must fit snugly into the bed rail peg holes (20 millimetres diameter). The poppets are the headstock and tailstock of the lathe — they hold the workpiece between them. Keep the top of each poppet at least 50 millimetres wide to provide a solid mounting surface for the centre spike.

Bu adım için malzemeler:

Hardwood Logs (Oak, Maple, Beech)Hardwood Logs (Oak, Maple, Beech)2 adet

Gerekli aletler:

AxeAxe
DrawknifeDrawknife
Chisel SetChisel Set
Wooden MalletWooden Mallet
8

Drive Centre Spikes into the Poppets

Hammer a large iron nail or spike into the exact centre of each poppet top, leaving approximately 25 millimetres of point protruding. These centre points engage the ends of the workpiece and define the axis of rotation. The points must be precisely centred — any offset causes the workpiece to wobble and the turning to be uneven. File the spike tips to a clean conical point if they are not already sharp.

Bu adım için malzemeler:

NailsNails2 adet

Gerekli aletler:

Wooden MalletWooden Mallet
Metal FileMetal File
9

Prepare Four Frame Legs

Hew four legs from green oak or ash, each approximately 750 millimetres long and 75 millimetres square. These support the bed rails at working height. The bed should sit at approximately 800 to 900 millimetres from the ground — roughly waist height for a standing operator. Splay the legs outward by 5 to 10 degrees for lateral stability so the frame does not tip during vigorous turning.

Bu adım için malzemeler:

Hardwood Logs (Oak, Maple, Beech)Hardwood Logs (Oak, Maple, Beech)4 adet

Gerekli aletler:

AxeAxe
DrawknifeDrawknife
10

Cut Mortises in the Leg Tops

At the top of each leg, cut a rectangular mortise approximately 100 millimetres long, 75 millimetres wide, and 50 millimetres deep to receive the end of a bed rail. Use a chisel and mallet to chop the mortise, clearing waste with the chisel bevel-down. First bore out most of the waste with an auger, then clean the walls with a chisel for a tight fit.

Gerekli aletler:

Chisel SetChisel Set
Wooden MalletWooden Mallet
Earth AugerEarth Auger
11

Assemble Bed Rails onto the Legs

Insert each bed rail end into its leg mortise. The two rails should be parallel, spaced approximately 130 millimetres apart — wide enough for the poppet bases to sit between them with their tenons dropping into the peg holes. Drive hardwood wedges through the joints from the outside to lock the rails permanently. Sight along the rails to confirm they are parallel and level.

Bu adım için malzemeler:

Wooden Felling WedgeWooden Felling Wedge8 adet

Gerekli aletler:

Wooden MalletWooden Mallet
12

Add Stretcher Rails Between the Legs

Connect each pair of legs (front pair and rear pair) with a horizontal stretcher rail mortised into the legs at approximately 200 millimetres from the ground. The stretchers prevent the frame from racking sideways under the repeated lateral forces of turning. Use the same mortise-and-wedge construction as the bed rail joints.

Bu adım için malzemeler:

Ash Wood Log SectionAsh Wood Log Section2 adet

Gerekli aletler:

Chisel SetChisel Set
Wooden MalletWooden Mallet
Earth AugerEarth Auger
13

Shape the Treadle Board

From a plank of ash approximately 600 millimetres long, 100 millimetres wide, and 25 millimetres thick, shape the treadle board. Round the top edges with a drawknife for comfort underfoot. Ash is chosen for the treadle because it withstands repeated impact loading without splitting — the same property that makes it the first choice for tool handles and sports equipment.

Bu adım için malzemeler:

Ash Board (1x4x24 inches)Ash Board (1x4x24 inches)1 adet

Gerekli aletler:

DrawknifeDrawknife
Crosscut SawCrosscut Saw
14

Hinge the Treadle to the Frame

Bore a hole through one end of the treadle and a matching hole through the front stretcher rail. Insert a hardwood dowel as a pivot pin. The treadle should swing freely up and down with no binding. Position the pivot so the free end of the treadle hangs directly below the workpiece position — this is where the drive cord attaches.

Bu adım için malzemeler:

Dowel RodDowel Rod1 adet

Gerekli aletler:

Earth AugerEarth Auger
15

Prepare the Drive Cord

Cut approximately 3 metres of strong hemp cord. The cord must grip the workpiece without slipping, yet be flexible enough to wrap tightly around it. Avoid synthetic cord — it stretches under tension and slips on smooth wood. Traditional bodgers used hand-twisted flax or hemp, which grips bark and green wood surfaces naturally through its rough fibre texture.

Bu adım için malzemeler:

Hemp CordHemp Cord3 metre

Gerekli aletler:

KnifeKnife
16

Mount the Spring Pole Overhead

Secure the thick end of the spring pole to a rafter, ceiling beam, or stout overhead timber directly above the lathe. The pole should extend forward so that its thin, flexible tip hangs directly above the workpiece position. Lash the thick end firmly with rope. In woodland workshops, bodgers traditionally lashed the pole to a living tree overhead — any sturdy anchor that allows the pole to flex freely will work.

Bu adım için malzemeler:

Binding RopeBinding Rope2 metre

Gerekli aletler:

Wooden MalletWooden Mallet
17

Connect the Drive Cord from Pole to Treadle

Tie one end of the hemp cord to the thin tip of the spring pole using a clove hitch secured with two half-hitches. Run the cord straight down, leaving a generous loop of slack in the middle (this slack wraps around the workpiece). Tie the other end to the free end of the treadle through a small hole bored near the tip. The cord should hang vertically when the pole is at rest — any lateral angle wastes energy.

Gerekli aletler:

Earth AugerEarth Auger
18

Mount a Test Workpiece Between the Poppets

Select a green wood blank of ash, birch, or sycamore, approximately 200 millimetres long and 75 millimetres in diameter. Mark the centre of each end with a punch or knife point. Set the poppets in the bed rails so the centre spikes engage both end marks, then lock with pegs driven into the bed rail holes. The blank must spin freely between the points without wobble.

Gerekli aletler:

Wooden MalletWooden Mallet
KnifeKnife
19

Wrap the Drive Cord Around the Workpiece

Take the slack loop of the drive cord and wrap it once around the workpiece. One full wrap is usually sufficient for green wood — the natural grip of hemp on bark or rough-cut surfaces provides enough friction. If the cord slips, add a second wrap. The wrapping direction matters: when you press the treadle down, the workpiece must spin toward you so that cutting happens on the downstroke.

20

Adjust the Spring Pole Tension

Press the treadle down with your foot. The cord should spin the workpiece toward you. When you release, the spring pole should pull the cord back, spinning the workpiece in reverse and lifting the treadle to its rest position. If the return is sluggish, move the cord attachment point closer to the flexible tip of the pole. If too violent, move it toward the stiffer base section.

21

Test-Turn with a Gouge

Hold a turning gouge firmly with both hands. Press the treadle to spin the workpiece toward you and apply the gouge edge to the wood on the downstroke only — lift the tool clear on the return stroke, as cutting against the reverse rotation would dig in and wreck the workpiece. In green wood, long curling shavings should peel away cleanly. The reciprocating action becomes rhythmic with practice: press, cut, release, pause, repeat.

Gerekli aletler:

GougeGouge

Malzemeler

8

Gerekli Aletler

11

CC0 Kamu Malı

Bu plan CC0 lisansıyla yayınlanmıştır. İzin almadan kopyalayabilir, değiştirebilir, dağıtabilir ve herhangi bir amaçla kullanabilirsiniz.

Planı üzerinden ürün satın alarak Maker'ı destekleyin, böylece Maker Komisyonu Satıcılar tarafından belirlenen komisyonu kazanırlar veya bu Planın yeni bir versiyonunu oluşturun ve gelir paylaşımı için kendi Planınıza bağlantı olarak ekleyin.

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