Graham Orm
Established Member
I picked one up very cheaply from a friend. (Plastic handled version). It's in the box and hardly used and in good nick. First thing was to sharpen the blade and try it. It cut but skipped and bounced and was basically useless for it's purpose.
I removed the blade and frog and did the usual flattening and cleaning of mating surfaces. I then marked the sole with a permanent marker and ran it over a flat plate with wet n dry on it. (With the frog in place but not the blade). This showed a huge hollow in the centre of the sole centering on the mouth.
I set about flattening it with a coarse paper and pretty soon realised that it was going to be a long haul. As the thing cost me next to nothing and I was enjoying the experiment of getting it working, I decided to flatten it using my bench belt sander. It has a flat surface that the belt runs over which is big enough to take the plane comfortably. After 20 minutes the pen marks were all but gone. (How long would this have taken by hand?).
I cleaned all the dust and grit from the plane and re-fitted the re-honed blade. A mahogany scrap was placed on the bench and off I went. I can only describe my smile as the widest it's ever been! What a transformation! It cuts as sweetly, as finely and as evenly as any I have seen or used.
As David Charlesworth says, all planes with very few exceptions are not working tools, but kit's when you get them requiring finishing off. It begs the question how Stanley could sell this tool and expect a DIY'er to be able to use it to any satisfactory degree.
I removed the blade and frog and did the usual flattening and cleaning of mating surfaces. I then marked the sole with a permanent marker and ran it over a flat plate with wet n dry on it. (With the frog in place but not the blade). This showed a huge hollow in the centre of the sole centering on the mouth.
I set about flattening it with a coarse paper and pretty soon realised that it was going to be a long haul. As the thing cost me next to nothing and I was enjoying the experiment of getting it working, I decided to flatten it using my bench belt sander. It has a flat surface that the belt runs over which is big enough to take the plane comfortably. After 20 minutes the pen marks were all but gone. (How long would this have taken by hand?).
I cleaned all the dust and grit from the plane and re-fitted the re-honed blade. A mahogany scrap was placed on the bench and off I went. I can only describe my smile as the widest it's ever been! What a transformation! It cuts as sweetly, as finely and as evenly as any I have seen or used.
As David Charlesworth says, all planes with very few exceptions are not working tools, but kit's when you get them requiring finishing off. It begs the question how Stanley could sell this tool and expect a DIY'er to be able to use it to any satisfactory degree.