Curious both from the people who have done it practically (as in making one) vs. the historical process.
I'm not unfamiliar to making either side escapement or bench planes, but getting the bead dead nuts is something that I'm assuming was done historically with a mother plane.
I have a lot of persimmon on hand to make boxing, and figured if I were to make beading planes, I could either box the entire profile (as some planes are done) in persimmon or table saw 1/8th boxing into a plane and then cut the profile in.
Anyone with any information about how the planes were made historically, or any comments about whether or not someone has created a one-off setup (perhaps a fence with an inverse profile of a scratch beader affixed in it) to make a good beader?
I'm not unfamiliar to making either side escapement or bench planes, but getting the bead dead nuts is something that I'm assuming was done historically with a mother plane.
I have a lot of persimmon on hand to make boxing, and figured if I were to make beading planes, I could either box the entire profile (as some planes are done) in persimmon or table saw 1/8th boxing into a plane and then cut the profile in.
Anyone with any information about how the planes were made historically, or any comments about whether or not someone has created a one-off setup (perhaps a fence with an inverse profile of a scratch beader affixed in it) to make a good beader?