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Leach Treadle Wheel Explanation 

Phillip Schmidt
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Want to know everything about a Leach style Treadle Wheel for pottery? I put together some helpful info to help if you are planning on building one. I made this with a person in mind, but think others might benefit from it too.
This type of wheel is the cream of the crop for throwing casual pottery. As a huge bonus, it uses no electricity to run. It is all leg-powered fun! It is an intimidating build, that I think just about anyone can accomplish with a bit of gumption and a bit of hiring out for machining and welding.
Here are a few tips:
1. Neither the all-hardwood nor painted pine treadle have mortise/tenon joinery in the smaller 2x4 supports, and I have not noticed that it needs them. Both however use them in the "T" frame with the thicker wood stock. These parts are the major support part of the wheel, use mortise and tenons here. This can be accomplished with simple chisels and a mallet, or to make things go much quicker use a table saw for the tenon and forstner bits for the mortising (using a chisel to clean out the rectangles better).
2. Have the wheel head, once fully seated, sit just a hair proud of the slop tray/box in order to use larger bats in the future. If it is proud, you will have no issues using large bats. If the wheel head sits lower, then you will most likely need to make bats with risers in them or multiple bats.
3. When making the flywheel, don't forget to mark the center of the circles before they are circles or it gets a bit complicated. And never lose those centers whilst making the flywheel!
I made this video very quickly, it's not perfect, but I think it fits the bill for filling in some strange missing information regarding treadle wheels that initially stumped me when trying to complete my first wheel.
You can do this! And be prepared to have some pitfalls and creative problem solving.
Phill
www.phillipschmidtpottery.com

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Опубликовано:

 

16 фев 2023

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Комментарии : 24   
@paladinahmadi3783
@paladinahmadi3783 26 дней назад
I enjoy listening to your voice
@phillipschmidtpottery
@phillipschmidtpottery 23 дня назад
Thanks! I think i sound rather like ernie from Sesame Street, so i appreciate the kindness.
@bearshield7138
@bearshield7138 9 месяцев назад
very nice job
@phillipschmidtpottery
@phillipschmidtpottery 9 месяцев назад
Thank you! I appreciate your kindness.
@buynsell365
@buynsell365 11 месяцев назад
I am thinking of building one like this also. Yours looks great. This video will help me a lot.
@phillipschmidtpottery
@phillipschmidtpottery 10 месяцев назад
Great! Let me know if you run into an issue and I can try to be helpful.
@phillipschmidtpottery
@phillipschmidtpottery 9 месяцев назад
Did you build it yet? How’s it going?
@pottersjournal
@pottersjournal Год назад
Congratulations so very nice. But I never know what to do with all the extra parts when trying to change a light bulb. A years quest led me to an old Klopfenstein treadle, I'm happy. Still hoping because of your talent and encouragement to others that someday I'll find a used homemade Leach- Nance out there too.
@phillipschmidtpottery
@phillipschmidtpottery Год назад
Perhaps someday you’ll stumble upon one at a yard sale. Good luck! Or just build your own!
@marcisaacs9407
@marcisaacs9407 8 месяцев назад
Hi, nice job. What is the distance between the main shaft and the eccentric? It looks like 4-5”. Am I close?
@lindawhite8566
@lindawhite8566 Месяц назад
Where can I buy the wheel thing?
@phillipschmidtpottery
@phillipschmidtpottery Месяц назад
Hi Linda! I’m not sure exactly what you mean by wheel thing. Do you mean the wheelhead-the metal round part that you throw the actual pots on? Or do you mean the entire treadle wheel?
@lindawhite8566
@lindawhite8566 Месяц назад
@@phillipschmidtpottery yes sir the whole metal part and the wheel.
@phillipschmidtpottery
@phillipschmidtpottery Месяц назад
@@lindawhite8566 to buy a treadle wheel is no easy or cheap task, unfortunately. Occasionally they pop up for sale. The better ones are like heirloom furniture. I actually made my own and one for a customer before. They sure are pretty wheels! I’d check Facebook marketplace or Craigslist, and your local clay supplier might know of one for sale. The wheelhead can be purchased from any wheel manufacture-I liked Lockerbie wheel heads as they have a 1” diameter opening to easily fit a 1” steel crankshaft.
@Adam-ui8iy
@Adam-ui8iy Год назад
Can you link to the hardware you used?
@Adam-ui8iy
@Adam-ui8iy Год назад
Also curious about where you sourced your wheel head from. The only ones I have been able to find are name brand: Pacifica, Brent, Shimpo and they're all $150+
@phillipschmidtpottery
@phillipschmidtpottery Год назад
Hi Adam! Is there specific hardware you are curious about? A lot of it was bought at a home goods store, Menards. Some parts were made on a welder, others were just reused pieces of other things that are already made. The "gate hardware" section at a large home store will have some nice hinges to use for the kicker, for example.
@phillipschmidtpottery
@phillipschmidtpottery Год назад
@@Adam-ui8iy The wheel head I used was a Lockerbie from Axner pottery supply. I used this because it fits onto a 1" metal shaft, which is what I was making my crankshaft from. You need to be careful which wheel head you buy (or you could make a wooden one much easier I presume) because they need to fit your crankshaft. Otherwise you'll need a metal lathe or need to bring it to a machinist and that will cost the big bucks $$. Even this 13" wide wheel head fits in the wood trough! I was skeptical at first. Just make everything as your own system of doing things, and you will naturally customize what you build and buy and use.
@Adam-ui8iy
@Adam-ui8iy Год назад
@@phillipschmidtpottery yea I would advise against a wooden wheel head. Wood warps and moves with time (and moisture) so eventually your wheel head would wobble like crazy. I’ll check out that supplier for the wheel head thanks!
@phillipschmidtpottery
@phillipschmidtpottery 10 месяцев назад
@@Adam-ui8iysure it will, but wood is easy to work with and seal, and relatively cheap. It’s accessible, which is really important in a build like this, and some who don’t know how to make a treadle but want to learn will be put off by sourcing a metal wheel head. A wooden one works just fine and if taken care of, can last a long time too. It’s also potentially more customizable for someone who has a need for it.
@theferallife8812
@theferallife8812 Год назад
While often referred to as a "Leach" wheel the original design was created by Dicon Nance.
@phillipschmidtpottery
@phillipschmidtpottery 10 месяцев назад
Correct! Thank you for the trivia.
@thewaxingmoonlotus
@thewaxingmoonlotus Год назад
are you sure you built it or someone else? it's not cool to take someone's hard work and call it yours what me and my building family think it's not your build
@phillipschmidtpottery
@phillipschmidtpottery Год назад
Did I build that treadle wheel? Yes of course I did! I made it for a client. What do you mean by your “building family?” Thanks!
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