Added: 5 years ago
From: bramadera
Views: 26,305
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  • the inside of it at the very end looks like a rectum

  • Compadre donde puedo comprar este disco en Chile??, soy de La Serena, hace 2 años que llevo fabricando didgeridoos de dos piezas y este disco me vendria de perillas

  • @Infrecuentedidgs: En España este disco lo vende Comercial Pazos comercialpazos(punto)es . Quizás ellos te lo puedan enviar a Chile. Si no, mándame un mensaje con tu email y lo hablamos...

  • Very nice work!

  • I've never seen a didg be in two parts unless it was broken! Really nice looking result but I'd be afraid it would break or get air leaks eventually.

  • i bet that didj is beautiful!!! i have made some picture frames out of bubinga and one thing for certain--- it is hard--- one of the hardest woods i have worked, 15 years of cabinet making. how about a picture of it finished?

  • qué guapo!!. Mucho curro, pero te ha quedado bien. Sabes si cambia mucho el sonido según la madera que le pongas??

    Existen maderas más fáciles para tallar?? estaba pensando en hacerme uno también, pero no me molaría tener que usar la radial...

    saludos!

  • Efectivamente, con maderas más duras el sonido parece más resonante, más brillante. Maderas más blandas hay muchas, sobre todo las de caducifolios (olmo, abedul, chopo...) y el pino, que es bastante fácil de conseguir.

    Sobre el tema de usar la radial, la ventaja es su facilidad de uso si no dominas las gubias-formones. Con maderas duras hace falta mucha experiencia con la maza.

  • extremely fast tool but very dangerous!

  • Do it old style. Find a tree that's been eaten out by termites and cut it down.

  • Yes, you can get most of the bulk out with a router, but the finish can be done with sculpting chisels just to get the inside rough like the work of termites.

  • is it really faster?

  • I don´t really know because I haven´t tried.

  • Yes, you are right, and that was my first idea. The thing is that I didn´t have a router but I already had a grinder, so it was the cheapest option. I also wanted the inside of the didge to get a rough finishing similar to the work of white ants on real eucaliptus didges.

  • wow...an angle grinder is pretty hefty overkill with this..what about a simple jig and a router?! man i still don't understand why you used a wood blade on an angle grinder...good job but a router does it much quicker

  • that blade is meant for angle grinders.

  • i also have the woodcarver, great tool!

    Highly recommended!

  • I would like to have the mini-grinder too. I don´t really need this one, but if it was a bit cheaper I would buy it. With these two tools you can carve almost anything!!

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