Good Afternoon All,
I've noticed a phenomenon which crops up fairly often when planing a board. If there is e.g. a bit of a hump in the middle as you plane along, it is possible by concentrating on that bit to get rid of it and indeed reduce it to a very slight concavity. How can it be then that when you subsequently make full length passes the hump reappears? The same can happen where there's a bit of a drop off at one end.
I initially put this down to my planing technique but I'm not sure that that is the problem as there are some boards which plane nicely square and flat and stay that way, although my technique could be faulty because if I'm doing something wrong then by definition I don't know what it is. I've found that as I become more experienced, I can deal with this sort of thing more quickly but I still don't get it as it seems to defy all logic. Could stresses in the wood itself be the cause?
I've noticed a phenomenon which crops up fairly often when planing a board. If there is e.g. a bit of a hump in the middle as you plane along, it is possible by concentrating on that bit to get rid of it and indeed reduce it to a very slight concavity. How can it be then that when you subsequently make full length passes the hump reappears? The same can happen where there's a bit of a drop off at one end.
I initially put this down to my planing technique but I'm not sure that that is the problem as there are some boards which plane nicely square and flat and stay that way, although my technique could be faulty because if I'm doing something wrong then by definition I don't know what it is. I've found that as I become more experienced, I can deal with this sort of thing more quickly but I still don't get it as it seems to defy all logic. Could stresses in the wood itself be the cause?