Lons
Established Member
I've just finished apart from honing the blade properly and will just give brief details for those who might find it interesting as it's pretty straightforward.
After my first attempt at a dovetailed infill plane from scratch last year which was just about passable I had intended making another out of brass and steel but stumbled across a cheap bronze casting on ebay so couldn't resist.
The casting was as rough as the proverbial, far worse than I expected so using files and hand sanding (my belt sander was out of action) it took a lo....ng time to get it flattened and all the pitting and defects out, probably longer than making one from scratch also I found cutting the mouth more difficult than it was the last time on a flat piece of steel before assembly.
Wood is walnut and the screws holding it in were replaced with glue and brass screws later filed down flush, I cut the cap from 12mm brass and turned the screw from bar. The iron is an old Alex Matheson salvaged from a scrap wooden plane.
For those who like to see shavings I tried it before polishing the handles and before the blade has been honed. Reasonable results on some sapele that tends to tear out so no long curly shavings but once honed and tuned I’d expect decent results.
After my first attempt at a dovetailed infill plane from scratch last year which was just about passable I had intended making another out of brass and steel but stumbled across a cheap bronze casting on ebay so couldn't resist.
The casting was as rough as the proverbial, far worse than I expected so using files and hand sanding (my belt sander was out of action) it took a lo....ng time to get it flattened and all the pitting and defects out, probably longer than making one from scratch also I found cutting the mouth more difficult than it was the last time on a flat piece of steel before assembly.
Wood is walnut and the screws holding it in were replaced with glue and brass screws later filed down flush, I cut the cap from 12mm brass and turned the screw from bar. The iron is an old Alex Matheson salvaged from a scrap wooden plane.
For those who like to see shavings I tried it before polishing the handles and before the blade has been honed. Reasonable results on some sapele that tends to tear out so no long curly shavings but once honed and tuned I’d expect decent results.
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