LurchBRONZE Member
old hand
929 posts
Location: Oregon, USA


Posted:
Hi all! I don't post here much anymore, and even less in the staff forum but I figured you guys are the ones to come to for your thoughts. biggrin

Long story short, I'm in an upper division college 3d design art course, with a project to create a "personal symbol" or an object with some meaning to me. Since I mainly spin poi, and the general population knows little to nothing about fire arts I figured this would be a good opportunity for me to spend a little time and make myself a staff. Besides, theres only so much you can do to deck out Poi, and even at that most people won't understand what they are.

So I set to making myself a staff, I know little to nothing about spinning a staff, but thats not stopping me. As of now its going to be 5' long (yes I like the idea and fluidity of a long staff.)

Keep in mind this is for a class all about 3d design, so a straight up staff isn't going to cut it, because of that I've decided to "twist" it a little bit. Theres going to be about 6" of tubing on the end to make it semi fire ready, it will be ground down sanded and finished to the best of my abilities in the week I have to do this project. That's not including the roughly 30 some laminations I have left to do.

Basic construction, steel rod down the core, with basically layers upon layers of high quality plywood laminated together giving it a very interesting look. The "grip" is a little over a foot long centered, going to probably be close to 1" - 1 1/2" diameter. I realize this is probably going to end up being very heavy by most standards so I guess we'll see how well it works to spin as opposed to just looking pretty....

Ok I'll shut up now. Any words of advice/encouragment/discouragement/critiques/comments/badgering is always welcome, otherwise I wouldn't be posting it here wink

If you want to see a picture of it as a work in progress with the begining of the roughing out done head here

https://img.photobucket.com/albums/v55/Defarge/staff.jpg

#homeofpoi -- irc.newnet.net Come talk to us we're bored frown

Warning: Please Do Not Jump On The Seals


mo-sephenthusiast
523 posts
Location: Edinburgh, UK


Posted:
Looking lovely! It does look like it'll be quite heavy - I can't quite figure out the scale from the pic - but it should look fantastic.

Suggestion wise, it'd be tempted to not make it a fire staff, and just have a really pretty wooden one. Although that said if the wood chars in a nice way, that could be gorgeous.

Is that your shopping list next to it, or things that you're going to try staining it with?

biggrin

monkeys ate my brain


LurchBRONZE Member
old hand
929 posts
Location: Oregon, USA


Posted:
That's actually a recipe for handy-dandy-tasty fake blood cool wink

As for the pic, the rounded out section in the middle is roughly a foot long, as are the twisted sections on either side so its about 3' (.9 meters) total in the picture.. I'm still debating about making it for fire or not..

#homeofpoi -- irc.newnet.net Come talk to us we're bored frown

Warning: Please Do Not Jump On The Seals


mechBRONZE Member
Carpal \'Tunnel
6,207 posts
Location: "In your ear", United Kingdom


Posted:
as a piece of advice, i would drop the steel rod in the moddle in favour for something less heavy

maybe a hard dowl rod?

if you have glued all eth sections together then it will just require some support, and that steel rod, will make it very VERY heavy

no matter what size you make the rod, nearly a meter of rod will make it vary heavy along side all teh wood

...

also maybe you cuold turn the rounded section down to free up some more wieght, adn make a rather nice turned grip so that you dont need to worry about a tennis grip or anything else for it


as for it being fire, if you are goingto do atht i would suggest once you have varnished it, seal it with PVA glue so that it does not burn the wood or leave dirty soot marks on it.........

if you use a wooden core, you could just flash the outside of the wooden tube and make it into a fire staff, with some wick on teh falshing

i have just knocked an image up in paint, ill upload it to my gallery for you to have a look

would be interested in what you think to mo-seph.

Step (el-nombrie)


OliveGOLD Member
enthusiast
285 posts
Location: Paris 19e, France


Posted:
looks nice
if you make it for fire .. do some cathedral-stack at the end-tips

Mech> PVA glue .. what's that .. where do you get it?

mo-sephenthusiast
523 posts
Location: Edinburgh, UK


Posted:
Wow, serious lightning fast ninja paint skills ubblol

Looks good - I agree about the wooden core - steel's a bit heavy and bendy. Fibreglass might be good...

I wouldn't have thought of using the flashing, it's a good plan.

I think if you're going to burn it, you want to think about what it'll look like when the wood gets charred a little, and try and design it to use this effect.

monkeys ate my brain


mechBRONZE Member
Carpal \'Tunnel
6,207 posts
Location: "In your ear", United Kingdom


Posted:
pva glue

is just like athe basic white wood glue you can buy it from hardware store, if you go in and ask for Polyvinyl acetates you should get what you need


and thankyou for teh ninja paint compliments, its how i work on smost of my staff designs first to make them on "paper"

i like the idea of making the wood all teh way to the end

fiber glass i think wuld not give the same support as a wooden core

as firber glas shas more of a tendency to bend and flex, while not breaking, as he is using a laminate piece then it might lead to splitting of the laminate, and thus snapping the staff?

Step (el-nombrie)


mo-sephenthusiast
523 posts
Location: Edinburgh, UK


Posted:
Written by: mech


fiber glass i think wuld not give the same support as a wooden core

as firber glas shas more of a tendency to bend and flex, while not breaking, as he is using a laminate piece then it might lead to splitting of the laminate, and thus snapping the staff?




yeah, I think you might well be right - it's stiffness that's important rather than strength. Composites are wierd and tricky and I suspect depend on all sorts of funny things e.g. how well the outside bonds to the core, the resilience of the bonds between the wood.

monkeys ate my brain


mechBRONZE Member
Carpal \'Tunnel
6,207 posts
Location: "In your ear", United Kingdom


Posted:
when i was looking at the staff the only thing i coudl think of would be pinning the woddend core at the end of the wodden handle, as there would be no way of ensuring a glue would bond all the way down, as it would push most of the glue out, as it would have to be a tight snug fit.


im loving that riser (handle) though, i may make some like it, but a lot smaller and turn it down to make the handle i was talking about....

my old man has a eally good wood lathe in the garage i might be able to use to do it with biggrin

Step (el-nombrie)


LurchBRONZE Member
old hand
929 posts
Location: Oregon, USA


Posted:
Thanks for the input guys biggrin

I'm not sure if i'll be able to get the steel rod out once I'm done. I used it because I had it laying around and it was the only thing long enough for what I wanted. its only 1/4" thick though so there is not really a whole lot of weight in the rod alone. Mostly it was a simple guide for my laminations, since clamping it otherwise would be nearly impossible. As for strength of the laminations, the glue itself is stronger than the wood, so I'd be more worried about the wood cracking and breaking than the joints..

Anyways, its 5am and I need to be up in 4 hours... Thanks again

#homeofpoi -- irc.newnet.net Come talk to us we're bored frown

Warning: Please Do Not Jump On The Seals


mechBRONZE Member
Carpal \'Tunnel
6,207 posts
Location: "In your ear", United Kingdom


Posted:
that was my point

the wood will be theing to spilt, most modern glues are stronger than nails. so you have little to worry about.

I only use nails as part of good practice....

the steel rob no matter how thick will add to teh end weight, and that where it will e killer for you

the heavier the weight of your staff the more it wnats to do its own thing

Step (el-nombrie)


GlåssDIAMOND Member
The Ministry of Manipulation
2,523 posts
Location: Bristol, United Kingdom


Posted:
yo lurch

It looks beautiful, the start of a nice peice of work



so the next bit you don't want to read



it also looks very heavy and fragile

lots of weight no strength



Wood generaly has a 20 times greater tensile strength along the grain than transverse to the grain, and ALL your loading will be transverse.

additionally each of your laminations is like a mini-crack already in the staff, so its already much weaker than the bulk material strength.

ie Your staff is a lot heavier than a standard stick, and a standard dowel staff with the grain along the sticks is at least 10 times stronger when applied with a bending load.

I broke one of mine last year.



preloading may help, by that I mean thread the end of the rod at each end, put on a washer and crank on 2 nuts at each end, do them up as tight as you can without damaging the wood.



The preload will convert a lot of the stress in the staff to being compressive, rather than tensile helping to prevent delamination. but I think that the preload will reduce over time as the wood inside creeps.



keep it as a showpeice of craftsman ship and only christen it once

and don't throw it, It will delaminate if you drop it.



Sorry Lurch, You probably didn't want to read that.



For future reference, to make this shape, it would have been best turned out of a single piece of nicely envirnomentally harvested from a sustainable forest or reclaimed hardwood, and yes you can turn helix's, its just not obvous how you do it. (hint think thread cutting)



Glass

(Who works professionally as an industrial designer, a product designer, a design engineer and a mechanical engineering consultant, and occasional does stress analysis while eating his breakfast, plus he's pretty practical and make a lot of stuff and staffs, and probably knows what he's talking about, although occasional bullsihts smile )
EDITED_BY: Glåss (1107957249)

mechBRONZE Member
Carpal \'Tunnel
6,207 posts
Location: "In your ear", United Kingdom


Posted:
*jaw its florr*

now that i was not expecting

thats most of my worries about the laminates, really well explained in a way i cant explain

thankyou glass

Step (el-nombrie)


LurchBRONZE Member
old hand
929 posts
Location: Oregon, USA


Posted:
Haha, all the things I was worried about frown

Looks like it'll be a staff for lookin not so much for spinning..

In case you're wondering why I'm building it this way it's because I've got some weird personal goal to get through this class without spending any money specifically on my projects. Strange goal, but I'm broke and there are a lot of free scraps to be had around here..I had the plywood from before so I just started building.

Thanks Glåss, I guess I'll just focus on the looks and not worry about its spinability (is that a word?)

Form over function eh?

#homeofpoi -- irc.newnet.net Come talk to us we're bored frown

Warning: Please Do Not Jump On The Seals


LurchBRONZE Member
old hand
929 posts
Location: Oregon, USA


Posted:
*sniff* well You guys were right, and just as I feared. I was hoping the rod would give it enough support to not let it flex so much but obviously that didn't work out so well. It's developed a couple cracks throughout, (not at the laminations just through the wood). It didn't really surprise me, it's just a bit sad that it didn't hold up better. It's just large enough to be noticable, but not big enough to be easily fixable. So I'll probably just end up finishing it up to look pretty and leave it as show only. No more playing :'(

I'll post a picture of it once it's done if you guys are interested.

#homeofpoi -- irc.newnet.net Come talk to us we're bored frown

Warning: Please Do Not Jump On The Seals


LavatwilightGOLD Member
old hand
834 posts
Location: Wellington somerset, UK


Posted:
Yeah id like to see smile
Shame you cant spin it:( the first pics you put up looked nice

Drawings by chalk minds, strech between the stars

Kyle Mclean-
Contact without dance is like sex without wiggling.
A) it does feel as good
B) it does not look as good on film


LurchBRONZE Member
old hand
929 posts
Location: Oregon, USA


Posted:
For those of you want wanted to see what it looks like finished, you can sneak a peak Here.

I can't seem to keep my hands off it and always want to be playing with it which is bad and causing more fractures throughout frown So as of now it is display only... I'm tempted to remake something similiar to it I actually like it quite a bit.. if it was stronger anyways.

Final length is ~4 1/2'

#homeofpoi -- irc.newnet.net Come talk to us we're bored frown

Warning: Please Do Not Jump On The Seals


TheBovrilMonkeySILVER Member
Liquid Cow
2,629 posts
Location: High Wycombe, England


Posted:
Wow, that's really nice biggrin

Shame it's not practically spinnable though frown

But there's no sense crying over every mistake. You just keep on trying till you run out of cake.


mcpPLATINUM Member
Flying Water Muppet
5,276 posts
Location: Edin-borrow., United Kingdom


Posted:
It is incredibly good looking.

That should satisfy anyone.

Even if it isn't spinnable, I still want one.

"the now legendary" - Kaskade
"the still legendary" - Kaskade

I spunked in my friend's aquarium and the fish ate it. I love all fish. Especially the pink ones. They are my bitches. - Anon.


mechBRONZE Member
Carpal \'Tunnel
6,207 posts
Location: "In your ear", United Kingdom


Posted:
i think i might steal your design and start making them in the uk for all those who wnat one in the uk wink

Step (el-nombrie)



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