When Tim mentioned Golf Ball thunder mugs the other day, I got this idea. Out in the scrap buckets is the remains of a reject idea I had during the Golf ball Mortar contest several years ago. For the past couple of days I have been working on it. It's built like my entry in the contest except instead of a piece of 1 inch round stock bolted to the base for a trunnion, I bolted on a piece of 1 inch plate scrap plate for a base.

You can see it sitting under this pile of projects. Last night I turned the base round. That was fun, turning a sheared of on three sides, ragged off cutting torch on the 4th side squarish piece round. Go it done how ever. Started a full diameter face cut then worked out. The shock of the interrupted portion of the cut was a whole lot less stressful than a side turning cut. Once I had a round bottom with flat sides it looked pretty good and the wife called me into the house for a bowl of ice and that finished me for the night.
This morning I got up and decide the wide 1 inch base was begging for some decoration and perfect place to try the Incremental cut method for making balls. Friend Wes Pilley- Powder Keg who use to be around here some years ago used the technique to make moulds that a lot of use bought from him...I have a few myself. Wes said he got a copy of Guy Lautard's book
Tables and Instructions for Ball and Radius Generation. I have had a copy since shortly after Wes Told us about the book.
Basically with a parting tool you make a progress set of cuts roughing out steps for the ball-round shape. The book clearly describes the process.
I decided to just start small on this bas and and make a simple 3/8" radius. Here's my set up on the lathe.

I used a dial indicator to measure carriage travel Z axis or as Lautard calls it North-South travel. North being the tail stock, south the headstock. North an south is use to indicate which side of the ball you are working on.
In and out of the tool, is the Y axis. Lautard's book has charts for established base radius as well as instructions for computing larger radii.

To start the cut, I set the south side of the parting tool blade 3/8" from my north edge of the work.

Now starting at the bottom of the chart, to make may first cut I come South towards the head stock 0.026" and feed in 0.001". Second cut is South 0.051" and in 0.003" and so on up the chart to the last cut of .375 S and in .375.

Next I painted cut with dykem and the started filing the high points away.

I kept filing until all the dykem was gone.

So this is where I am on this project.

Now out to the garage for to finish up the Elevator on the SAMCC gun.