Five Options For Woodturning Lathe Faceplates

Threaded Wood Faceplate

This is best viewed with the control immediately above this. However, in case of difficulty, it is also posted on YouTube and FaceBook.

I use a lot of faceplates in many different configurations. I prefer to start with an inexpensive block of poplar, thread it, and then adapt it to my project. When finished, I may face off the base block and put it away until another is needed. I have a box dedicated to my cache of faceplates.

Steel faceplates are too expensive to have a lot of. To add insult to injury, attaching wood requires screws which can ruin my turning tools if hit.

Beyond all steel faceplates, there are two options: a steel nut embedded in wood; direct threading in wood.

For a larger 1 1/4″ x 8 tpi spindle, 8 tpi is not an industry standard. The standard for 1 1/4 threads is 7 threads per ince. Therefore, an 8 tpi nut is a special specification, very expensive and hard to find.

Instead, taps are available for 1″, 1 1/4″, and M33 spindles. Direct threaded into a block of inexpensive poplar is quicker than embedding a nut in wood. Poplar performs well for all my projects.

I’ll show you mine – Please show me yours.

Enjoy!


2 Responses to “Five Options For Woodturning Lathe Faceplates”

  1. Jerry Johnson says:

    great video showing the options thank you