bugbear
Established Member
OK, that''s a lot of (implicit) questions.
Stage 1, IMHO, would be to use scrap wood to brace up your Clark bench. A couple of rails under the top, across the grain, glued and screwed will massively increase the tops rigidity. Whilst rectilinear construction (M&T's) works really well, and looks neat, it's only effective on BIG legs and rails; so I would advise adding either simple planks (more scrap) across the corners, or using plywood (or even hardboard) to box in the frame, resulting in a non-rackable frame.
Stage 2, restore/tune/prepare your mid size plane. (you said 5 1/5, so I'm not quite sure what you've good). There's lots of info out there. so I won't say any more. You natural stones will be of great help getting a truly great edge on the blade, lucky you!
Stage 3. The traditional approach to an oilstone box is to carve it out of solid - one piece for the base, one for the lid. This is because traditional glues simply wouldn't hold up in the presence of the oil. You could make small boxes in the normal "tissue box" fashion, but the pieces and joints required would be rather small and fiddly, so I'd recommend going traditional. However, the traditional lid design has a plane "pyramid". If you do this (and have many stones) the boxed stones won't stack, so I'd leave 'em flat.
http://www.ebay.co.uk/itm/Vintage-natur ... 7675.l2557
(I don't think that one's a natural stone, BTW, but I'm illustrating the BOX)
Here's a couple of WIPs on stone boxes;
http://www.norsewoodsmith.com/content/oil-stone-boxes
http://paulsellers.com/2014/11/steps-to ... stone-box/
You'll want some kind of hand router to level and smooth the bottom of the excavated holes.
BugBear
Stage 1, IMHO, would be to use scrap wood to brace up your Clark bench. A couple of rails under the top, across the grain, glued and screwed will massively increase the tops rigidity. Whilst rectilinear construction (M&T's) works really well, and looks neat, it's only effective on BIG legs and rails; so I would advise adding either simple planks (more scrap) across the corners, or using plywood (or even hardboard) to box in the frame, resulting in a non-rackable frame.
Stage 2, restore/tune/prepare your mid size plane. (you said 5 1/5, so I'm not quite sure what you've good). There's lots of info out there. so I won't say any more. You natural stones will be of great help getting a truly great edge on the blade, lucky you!
Stage 3. The traditional approach to an oilstone box is to carve it out of solid - one piece for the base, one for the lid. This is because traditional glues simply wouldn't hold up in the presence of the oil. You could make small boxes in the normal "tissue box" fashion, but the pieces and joints required would be rather small and fiddly, so I'd recommend going traditional. However, the traditional lid design has a plane "pyramid". If you do this (and have many stones) the boxed stones won't stack, so I'd leave 'em flat.
http://www.ebay.co.uk/itm/Vintage-natur ... 7675.l2557
(I don't think that one's a natural stone, BTW, but I'm illustrating the BOX)
Here's a couple of WIPs on stone boxes;
http://www.norsewoodsmith.com/content/oil-stone-boxes
http://paulsellers.com/2014/11/steps-to ... stone-box/
You'll want some kind of hand router to level and smooth the bottom of the excavated holes.
BugBear