This is my surface planer, nearly 7 feet with adjustable bed
A few choks underneath to make level, and a cleat on the end for a planing stop
No saw cuts nor chisel marks makes it real easy as I can see lumps
and twist.
Not many use a bench surface and hand plane like such.
Many scoff at the idea, but can never seem to provide an alternate method which is
easer, speedier, and more accurate than working like so,
and just end up making potshots instead.
Charlesworth and Cosman would be two, should one glean from whatever hints of such use they might have suggested on some
free video...
if you catch my drift.
No mad workout or strife, especially once you can use the cap iron to its full potential and not have to do any silly shenanigans regarding grain, as some might suggest.
David W (D_W here) has some documents and youtubes online i.e a woodcentral article "Setting a Cap Iron" as does Derek Cohen have some stuff on the forums and his blog.
That is the next step after learning how to plane, going beyond the basic tutorials
That information is
hands down from the best of the lot, which many either
disregard with ignorance, or to keep one on a drip feed system.
Many fail at learning how to use a close set cap iron for a few reasons,
mainly because they skip the
free hints from the former guys
teachings,
or just won't dare click to see a plane working the way it should be setup, with their own eyes?
Possibly still think a sheet of ply is a suitable surface and refuse to think not, lol.
Just sayin the hand planes are not slow or difficult, and anyone who suggests so has bad habits.
All the best
Tom