Handmade router plane WIP

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MikeG.

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Essex/ Suffolk border
After three weeks solid drawing without a day off, I needed some workshop time. I'd a little project in mind for a while, and took the opportunity today. After half a day sharpening chisels and planes, tidying, and a bit of plane fettling too, I got started. This is all from stuff out of my scrap bin, and, for the fun of it, I set myself two rules: no power tools, and no sandpaper (or rasps). So this is all with saws and blades.

First, a found a piece of scrap oak suitable for the body of my router plane idea, and cleaned it up with my plane:

j3b4UHl.jpg


Now, I made this up entirely on the bench as I was doing it, so there are no drawings, and I used no measurements. The only thing I know for certain is that the angle on the plane bed is 35 degrees:

tQQiYyr.jpg


I was going to just do half-laps to join the side pieces, but last minute decided to do them as dovetail half-laps:

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With the ends being cut on the angle, there was no reference to properly mark from, and so the marking was by pencil. That was to have consequences..... Anyway, next, to the side-pieces:

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The first side went swimmingly well. The second dovetail didn't. Much too loose, and inaccurate:

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I found my old "egg beater" drill (remember the rules!!) and drilled a hole, then slit the dovetail up the middle:

iOMtlTk.jpg


I fashioned a slim wedge (too slim, as I found out later).

I had a change of heart over the next part. Originally I intended to insert a short length of steel rod, but did this instead out of oak:

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That ugly gap was because I forgot to bring my glasses back out, and just carried on regardless. Pillock.

I don't like Danish oil. I particularly don't like it on oak. But this is only a tool, and a friend gave me a can of the stuff (gee thanks), so I thought I'd try to use some of it up. A couple of quick coats prior to gluing up:

mL5U9Yb.jpg


Then a dry fit, and a check on the arrangements:

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Glue up (2 joints.......just 2 joints. How could anyone cock that up?) didn't go well. I used D4, so didn't have long. The first dovetail was quick and easy, but the one with the wedge......erm.........wasn't. I glued everything, including the wedge,assembled the joint, then drove the wedge home. It hit the bottom of the hole without being wide enough to close up the gaps around the dovetail. I had to pull everything apart, and of course, the wedge wouldn't come out. In the end I had to cut it away, getting glue over everything including the saw teeth. With the glue drying rapidly, I had to fashion another wedge, touch up the glue, reassemble, bash the wedge home, and hope.

All's well that ends well. The fixed dovetail was somewhere near reasonable:

m3ssoNP.jpg


Setting that aside to dry, I then made a quick shooting board. I came back to the router an hour or two later. The above photo is after I had cleaned up the ends with a plane, and re-did the Danish oil. The final job was to fettle the underside, and I'm afraid I couldn't think of any way of doing that properly without using sandpaper. So, I marked up the base so I could see where was high and low:

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Clamped some paper tightly to my planer in-feed table:

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Then fettled away:

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Finally, time to give it a try. I roughed out a housing in a bit of scrap pine, stuck in a 1/2" chisel and tapped it to position with a hammer, then scraped away:

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It worked a treat!!

QKTER3i.jpg
 
Fantastic stuff - an old woman's tooth with elephant's ears! What made you choose that particular bedding angle?

Cheers,

Carl
 
I just measured the angle on my chisels and worked out that 35 degrees would leave the pointy end down below the heel, just, which seemed like a good idea.
 
That's great. How are the handles to use? They look like you can get a good grip and downward force on them.
 
They work great. Really comfortable, both pulling and pushing. You don't need any great force though. It's for cleaning up rather than housing out.
 
I made something similar, not as classy as yours. I did wonder if the taper on the chisel being the 'wrong way' was going to be a problem but it doesn't seem to make much difference.
 
Nice, I might have a go at that, thanks for sharing.



Sent from my iPad using Tapatalk Pro
 
Interesting design, thanks for sharing. Much broader than usual which makes sense if you are using it on joints in big timbers. The cross bar looks a bit small in oak but is clearly working ok. Simple enough to replace if it ever does break away. Good recovery from the dovetail problem too.

But would it work with $200 chisels? :wink:
 
AndyT":20uefdb7 said:
Interesting design....... Much broader than usual which makes sense if you are using it on joints in big timbers. .........

Yes, I wanted something which I can use on fine work at the bench and also on big lumps of green oak in my house restoration. With this in mind I made the slot wide enough to comfortably take a 1" chisel.
 
Thanks for the SBS Mike. I love "I made this up as I went along" designs when they come out well!

MikeG.":3apqeocw said:
I just measured the angle on my chisels and worked out that 35 degrees would leave the pointy end down below the heel, just, which seemed like a good idea.
Wonderful practical way of picking a bedding angle.
 
MikeG.":1gzvc58n said:
I just measured the angle on my chisels and worked out that 35 degrees would leave the pointy end down below the heel, just, which seemed like a good idea.

Thanks, was that to increase the 'plane' action rather than the more scraping action of a traditional Old Woman's Tooth router plane?

Do you find the handles easier to use than either an OWT or metal router plane?

I've made an OWT and was thinking of making a wooden router plane with a 'bent' iron, in which case I might incorporate your idea for the handles - I really ought to make one of each though, just to be sure. I'll post the results - assuming I get around to it! :oops:

Thanks for sharing the idea, always good to keep the creative juices flowing.


Cheers,
Carl
 
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