I made these, the one in the front is for a large-handed friend, and the one in the back is mine. The handle is a bit large for my hand (lesson learned on a jack that the handle should be a bit shorter than the try plane handle since it's a two or three finger open grip on the handle, and that's it. The large handle looks a bit funny on both of them.
Both of these are modeled after an old mathieson jack plane that wiley horne (who is probably not known here) sent to me when he heard I was interested in building some planes and knew that I liked mathieson planes.
17 inches long, both of them, and the one in the back has a 2 1/4" english iron (can't remember the make, something NOS - hildick maybe), and the one in the front has an old chapin and stevens iron. Both are wonderful irons to sharpen.
http://s28.postimg.org/ps9kljk99/P1080390.jpg
http://s30.postimg.org/djgi9kstd/P1080387.jpg
I don't sand on these planes, personal irk, and they are made with the blanks sized from rough by hand, only using a cordless drill to do the initial mouth opening. Handles are rasped and then scraped instead of sanded, scraping them leaves an interesting texture on the end grain, a little bit of bite but not blistering, and it preserves the lines on the side of the handle (one of which was washed out by the flash on the front plane).
American Beech. I've seen some comments, maybe it was here, about whether or not american beech is a suitable substitute for euro beech - they're similar, but american beech is a smoother feeling wood. Badly behaved if not sawn right, but if sawn pith perfectly on center, it is fabulous, bettered only by air dried apple, which is impossible to find in these size blanks now (the saw handle sneaking in is quartered air dried apple).
I have some old jack planes, but none are as good as a freshly made and freshly fitted and bedded plane. Everything is so tight on a new one.
Finish is boiled linseed oil and briwax.
Both of these are modeled after an old mathieson jack plane that wiley horne (who is probably not known here) sent to me when he heard I was interested in building some planes and knew that I liked mathieson planes.
17 inches long, both of them, and the one in the back has a 2 1/4" english iron (can't remember the make, something NOS - hildick maybe), and the one in the front has an old chapin and stevens iron. Both are wonderful irons to sharpen.
http://s28.postimg.org/ps9kljk99/P1080390.jpg
http://s30.postimg.org/djgi9kstd/P1080387.jpg
I don't sand on these planes, personal irk, and they are made with the blanks sized from rough by hand, only using a cordless drill to do the initial mouth opening. Handles are rasped and then scraped instead of sanded, scraping them leaves an interesting texture on the end grain, a little bit of bite but not blistering, and it preserves the lines on the side of the handle (one of which was washed out by the flash on the front plane).
American Beech. I've seen some comments, maybe it was here, about whether or not american beech is a suitable substitute for euro beech - they're similar, but american beech is a smoother feeling wood. Badly behaved if not sawn right, but if sawn pith perfectly on center, it is fabulous, bettered only by air dried apple, which is impossible to find in these size blanks now (the saw handle sneaking in is quartered air dried apple).
I have some old jack planes, but none are as good as a freshly made and freshly fitted and bedded plane. Everything is so tight on a new one.
Finish is boiled linseed oil and briwax.