- Joined
- Jan 21, 2013
- Messages
- 4
Last week I did something I had never done before. I had a set of plastic mower desk wheels that were well worn out on the inside, but not on the outside. I decided to make bushings from an old hickory shovel handle. First, I chucked the wheels in the lathe and bored them to 3/4". I then cut a 6" piece from the end of the hickory shovel handle. I had to improvise a way to chuck up the wood (rounded end and slight shank taper), so I cut off the rounded end as square as possible and drilled a countersink hole in center of the other end. I then loosely chucked one end in, ran my centering tool up tight into the countersink hole, chucked up tight, and commenced to reduce the diameter of the wood with the same tooling bits as I use for metal. After I had achieved the desired outside diameter, I removed the centering tool and replaced with a bit chuck and 1/2" boring bit. The wood stock was still running true, so I bored throught the center for ID, then removed the wood and cut to desired length for the wheel centers. Worked great and I save about $30 on new wheels.