Doing it by hand with sandpaper is a nonstarter.
Also I don’t have a lathe :-/

  • AMillionMonkeys@lemmy.worldOP
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    1 year ago

    FWIW the dowels would be about that long - 5" or so.
    Now I’m contemplating chucking them in a drill and running them against a roundover bit in the router. I could drill a 1/2" hole in a block to act as a guide and keep things from exploding.

    • DavidP@toast.ooo
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      1 year ago

      Do try the drill plus support block, but first try rounding them by hand with a rasp, file, or a bench chisel. Using the router like that, especially with such short pieces, seems like a recipe for disaster.

      • c7plumbcrazy@lemmy.world
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        1 year ago

        undefined> y the drill plus support block, but first try rounding them by hand with a rasp, file, or a bench chisel. Using the router like that, especially with suc

        Ooh, if you have a router and round-over bit, you could make a jig making a modified router base-plate out of 1.5" thick stock. The idea would be to create a recess for the round-over bit to set in approximately halfway into the stock. Then have an “1/2” hole offset from the radius of the bit to all you to insert the dowel and rotate. With the jig attached to the router and a hole with a tight enough tolerance you may not get too much chatter when feeding the stock into the jig.