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Best HandHeld Extruder for Feet for Large Pots


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I am looking for a good handheld extruder to make feet for very large hand-built pots. I would like something easy to pull that gives me a long coil that doesn't need to be spliced. Any suggestions? I am open to both conventional extruders and sausage barrel extruders and really appreciate any help I can get. My hands are a bit weak, thus the need for for a trigger that works well.

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If you are looking for an easy-to-squeeze/pull extruder for relatively small (in cross-section) coils of considerable length, I don't think there are any on the market. You will have to build one by adapting a  cordless electric caulk gun from the construction industry. A short length of 1½" PVC plumbing pipe is the same diameter as a standard tube of caulk. You can cut the desired coil shape in an end cap for the pipe. The one I made can extrude about 7 feet of handle before the tube runs out of clay.

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@PeterHYears ago I had surgery on my RT thumb, long story short the first knuckle joint died after surgery. I could no longer pull handles the way I used to. I tried handheld manual extruders for a while, but was always frustrated by the line that I would get between each of the squeezes. One day I was looking at tools in a big box store and noticed the Ryobi electric putty gun. I purchased one to try to jury rig it for my purposes as an electric handheld extruder. It works well, and I still use it as my handle maker, no matter what the form is whether mugs, teapots, pitchers or other.  The article I wrote was published in Ceramics Monthly, and I have it on my blog site that is listed in my profile.

 

best,

Pres

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Handheld extruders are notoriously difficult to use, especially if you're trying to extrude something small. They take a lot of hand strength, and very soft clay is generally needed. Any reason to not just get a wall mount extruder? It'll allow for longer coils and better leverage.

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Wish that I had the space to mount a wall mount extruder. I used the Bailey extruders for years when teaching. However my shop does not have wall space to mount an extruder without removing quite a bit of useful storage.   My hand held extrudes about 4-5 feet of good handle material, good enough for me.

 

best,

Pres

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21 hours ago, neilestrick said:

Handheld extruders are notoriously difficult to use

This has been my experience too. I made one from a caulking gun and pvc pipe, it only works with the softest clay and still difficult to sqeeze. I have a wall mounted one, but I don’t use it. Too large and unwieldy, I don’t extrude enough to justify the bother. I’m intrigued by the “electric assist” described by @Pres and @Dick White!

 I do use this thing. Love it. The handle creates enough leverage to make it easy. Unfortunately I don’t know what it was originally made for and I can’t even remember where I got it. I think it was some surplus geological or engineering testing equipment, it wasn’t from a ceramic supplier. 

IMG_0205.jpeg

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On 7/14/2024 at 3:25 PM, Pres said:

@PeterHYears ago I had surgery on my RT thumb, long story short the first knuckle joint died after surgery. I could no longer pull handles the way I used to. I tried handheld manual extruders for a while, but was always frustrated by the line that I would get between each of the squeezes. One day I was looking at tools in a big box store and noticed the Ryobi electric putty gun. I purchased one to try to jury rig it for my purposes as an electric handheld extruder. It works well, and I still use it as my handle maker, no matter what the form is whether mugs, teapots, pitchers or other.  The article I wrote was published in Ceramics Monthly, and I have it on my blog site that is listed in my profile.

 

best,

Pres

 

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