This plane was found at the back of a cupboard in my parents’ house. It must have been there undisturbed for at least 25 years and was evidently an unfinished project by my late father. As you can see, it is fabricated rather than carved out of a single piece of wood and was coming unglued. No adjusting mechanism was provided. I decided to have a go at making it into a working tool as I like to make useful things from what appears to be junk.
I re-glued it and added screws to reinforce it. The knob was rather irregular and seemed to have been made without a lathe somehow. I turned a replacement knob from an offcut of iroko. Then I made an adjuster that pivots in a brass tube set in the handle and engages in a hole drilled in the chip breaker.
It didn’t feel heavy enough for my liking and I had the idea of drilling it and filling the holes with lead weights taken from an old piano keyboard. As a result it weighs as much a metal No.5, much to the surprise of those who pick it up.
So there it is: a real “Frankenplane”, made of beech with an iroko knob, a mahogany handle, a 2” Stanley blade & chip breaker, a Record cap iron, a Norris style adjuster, filled with lead and made by two people about thirty years apart. It works quite well, particularly as the first plane to use on sawn wood. I intend to provide a way of adjusting the width of the mouth if I can devise one.
I re-glued it and added screws to reinforce it. The knob was rather irregular and seemed to have been made without a lathe somehow. I turned a replacement knob from an offcut of iroko. Then I made an adjuster that pivots in a brass tube set in the handle and engages in a hole drilled in the chip breaker.
It didn’t feel heavy enough for my liking and I had the idea of drilling it and filling the holes with lead weights taken from an old piano keyboard. As a result it weighs as much a metal No.5, much to the surprise of those who pick it up.
So there it is: a real “Frankenplane”, made of beech with an iroko knob, a mahogany handle, a 2” Stanley blade & chip breaker, a Record cap iron, a Norris style adjuster, filled with lead and made by two people about thirty years apart. It works quite well, particularly as the first plane to use on sawn wood. I intend to provide a way of adjusting the width of the mouth if I can devise one.