richarddownunder
Established Member
Hi All
I'm in the process of making a copy (more-or less) of a Spiers panel plane. I've got the dovetails cut on one side of the sole (with a few gaps which I hope will fill when I start peining) ...see pics...and am contemplating the secondary bevels that enable the locking of the sides and sole.
There seems to be a range of options, either filing the (brass) tails (on the sides) on the outside edge whereby peining the side of the sole will lock the tails in place. Or, the pins on the sole can be filed so that peining the brass locks the side and sole. Man, it's hard to describe this process without being very wordy but I prefer the former approach as it involved peining the steel more, rather than the brass!
Anyway, the question is, assuming I file the sides of the brass tails as shown in this link Dovetailing Infill Planes (Part I) - Handplane Central he says "you can taper them from a wide bevel at the outside edge to an almost non existent bevel at the corners then filling them in is much easier. You don’t need to push the metal into the corners as much. " So, rather than filing the secondary bevel equally from the inner edge of the tail to the outer edge, he suggests tapering them, which sounds like a good idea. I thought a small jig might enable this to be done.
So, what is the most fool-proof way of doing this. Is tapering them a good idea and what angle should the secondary bevel be? Is a jig/guide a good idea (a piece of wood with an angle cut on it) ? I have quite an angle on the tails so don't mind losing some of that if I file a tapered bevel.
Hope that makes sense.
Thanks
Richard
I'm in the process of making a copy (more-or less) of a Spiers panel plane. I've got the dovetails cut on one side of the sole (with a few gaps which I hope will fill when I start peining) ...see pics...and am contemplating the secondary bevels that enable the locking of the sides and sole.
There seems to be a range of options, either filing the (brass) tails (on the sides) on the outside edge whereby peining the side of the sole will lock the tails in place. Or, the pins on the sole can be filed so that peining the brass locks the side and sole. Man, it's hard to describe this process without being very wordy but I prefer the former approach as it involved peining the steel more, rather than the brass!
Anyway, the question is, assuming I file the sides of the brass tails as shown in this link Dovetailing Infill Planes (Part I) - Handplane Central he says "you can taper them from a wide bevel at the outside edge to an almost non existent bevel at the corners then filling them in is much easier. You don’t need to push the metal into the corners as much. " So, rather than filing the secondary bevel equally from the inner edge of the tail to the outer edge, he suggests tapering them, which sounds like a good idea. I thought a small jig might enable this to be done.
So, what is the most fool-proof way of doing this. Is tapering them a good idea and what angle should the secondary bevel be? Is a jig/guide a good idea (a piece of wood with an angle cut on it) ? I have quite an angle on the tails so don't mind losing some of that if I file a tapered bevel.
Hope that makes sense.
Thanks
Richard