First of all a shank is round like on a bowl gouge and a tang is flat on scrapers and skews. Why is the shank on all bowl and spindle gouges are turned down to a common fractional size? This is because high quality tool steel is sold .015 oversize so the shank needs to be turned down to a common size to fit all the aftermarket handles and so a common drill bit can be used to bore a wood handle. Example; a 1/2 diameter tool will have a shank that measures .500 What is the shank length? On the 3/8 and ½ diameter tools the shank is 2 inches long. The 5/8 and ¾ diameter tools are 2-1/2 inches in length. The 1-1/4 inch SRG have a ¾ inch diameter shank that is 2-1/2 inches long. All tangs are 2 inches long. On the 1/2 and 3/4 inch scrapers and skews the tang will fit in a 1/2 inch nose. The larger scrapers and skews will fit in a 5/8 nose.
Tell us about the company!
Thompson lathe tools started a couple years ago when I decided to make my own turning tools, as a machine repairman by trade and a good machinist it was fun thing to do. What started as a simple project turned into something very involved, many one of a kind flute shapes were tested , the surprise discovery was the flute didn’t have to be real deep like the other tools on the market to work well. This went on until I found one that was a balance between the flute shape and depth of the flute that handled well and didn’t clog, with more steel under the flute it was a stronger tool. As I passed these tools out to my friends they started to ask for different shape flutes and diameters until the line of V and U shape bowl gouges was created.
I sent one tool to Mark Kauder to evaluate because he has compared the different steels in the past, It did well and his club placed a order… this changed everything and was the deciding factor to take it from a hobby to a business. Then it hit the internet! With only a few tools to sell and nothing else, one person after another took a chance on a unknown toolmaker and I thank each and everyone who did. Woodturners all across the nation helped created the company from the name to the products and made it what it is today… a corporation.
We haven’t changed much in the past year with only one employee (me) I handcraft each and every tool one at a time. It’s a long process to go through, each piece of steel is handled 13 times on it’s journey from a length of rough stock to a turning tool that’s ready to use on your lathe.