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repeating just as it is- for all to see, learn, enjoy and post more. The subject matter doesn't expire. New readers please go to the top of the thread and read down through this point. This is not the beginning, and nevermind my personal ramblings. I'm just newly infatuated by block planes.
SO, i've never learned to use a proper block plane. Just not from a wood-working background beyond basic carpentry, until I took a timberframe construction workshop. We made a building with hand tools and interlocking joinery-no fasteners, no brackets. I learned a lot about precision carpentry those few weeks.
Then I saw a dusty old plane in a pile of junk at Mom's recently. She gave it to me because she doesn't do fine woodworking either-but she's built a few buildings.
I cleaned up the tool, but didn't understand the proper setup. As a straight-razor honer and user, i do know sharp and how to make simple edges that way.
I searched youtube and here and found a few videos. This is my favorite so far:
After getting all "setup" I grabbed a piece of pine from a shipping container and ...
@!*%?&, not much success right off-grab chatter adjust clog adjust more same $#@*. So I grabbed a draw knife and knocked off some good curls, started thinking maybe i'm just a freehander sort of guy. Then i hung the grain with the draw knife and dug in-whoops. Maybe there is something _TO_ these planes.
I thought i might tweak more on it.
SO i messed around and twiddled with the setup of the plane (a Stanley copy about 8" long) and BOOM it happened. Started getting great curly curls from the pine. Oh that's nice, real nice. Main problem was that I had the chip breaker too close to the edge (i think in thousandths mostly, and these wood guys been talking in fractions.)
I couldn't stop there, I picked up a roughly split 4x4 hunk of fresh Osage (the next handy thing) and clamped it (in the machinist vise). Thinking this can't work, Osage is such the bad boy.
But it did. Now I have a floor full of bright yellow curls now and a somewhat flattened surface of BOdock (as we call it 'round here).
So the point is that simple wood-working tools aren't always
that simple to figger out and employ, but can be quite delightful if you get them set up and properly
sharped*. I now have a new tool to enjoy-for the cost of education (online) and some time re-furbishing. If you've never learned
the plane, I highly recommend learning and trying 'em out.
*sharped, word for the weekend-expires on Monday. Try it, it's fun.