I don't see how you can have a leg vise on a screw which also touches the floor, it would drag.
If I have to hit something that hard, maybe a chisel, not sharpened properly, then I need some waterstones.
I'm probably going to go with the Hovarter mechanisms for wagon and leg vice but I was trying to avoid the St Andrews cross if possible. Any new alternative ideas are very welcome.
Thanks for that. I realised it was a linear motion bearing but I got the impression it somehow held its position when you wanted to tighten, if that makes sense. I'm planning on using Hovarter Custom Vise hardware and I have a feeling it can be a bit fussy. The use of the wedge kind of puts me...
I have since found this but I am not sure I fully understand how the hardware works, if it uses freely available components or is made from scratch.
https://www.popularwoodworking.com/editors-blog/richard-maguire-hardware-my-first-look/
I kept reading that the No3 was often the favourite smooth plane, I have a No4 but have only recently really started to play with hand tools.
I have a relatively large hand, size 8 or 9 gloves, but I find the No 3 doesn't feel right after the No4.
I'm in the middle of a bench build. I quite like the idea of the lower metal bar on this vise, instead of a board with holes and a pin or an X link type similar to the Benchcrafetd version.
Has anyone seen or used one of these, or have any idea of the construction?
My workshop is an old cowshed, half buried in the hill, stone walls with no mortar so damp. I find metall-protect from Felder works and should be ok on timber as it is designed to protect iron surfaces on woodworking machines. I have a rag next to the spray and just wipe tools after use.
I have the smallest Felder/Hammer saw. It has a tension meter so I guess yours will too. I find I can't actually get as much tension as the gauge suggests but the blade should be hard to deflect when you push against it with a single finger.
There was 40cm of snow forecast yesterday but just a lot of wet snow that fortunately did not settle. 28C a week ago, today 0C and snowing rain again. if you need a hand let me know. I don't have a lot of free time at the moment but if I can get away I will. Murrazano must be about an hour away.
I recently purchased one of Kingshotts books but thought this video an excellent introduction to the handplane and how it works. Better than anything I have read or seen before.
I wont touch them. I bought a Scheppach pillar drill from them which is adequate but far from accurate and a reciprocating saw that lasted 3 days, my wife was cutting up pallets, shaft snapped.