MattR
Established Member
Hi all.
I have a #5 bench plane that I have been trying to set up and use, mostly via youtube videos.
Its a New plane, and after some trial and error I managed to take it apart check the blade for sharpness (it leaves a scratch on my thumbnail without any real pressure so I assume it is) and put it back together again.
I have adjusted it so that I can plane down each side to try and get the wood shavings even. (If any of this is wrong, or pointless, then apologies. Theres a million and one you tube videos, all slightly different!)
All of that seemed ok, so I decided to just practice planing a piece of pine I had. the Pine is an old shelf, so it has already been through a planing machine, and is relatively smooth.
I am working on an old Black and Decker Work mate, with the wood clamped tight, though it is at a fairly low height.
When I plane, most of the time I get nothing (as I'd expect as its already a finished piece of wood), though now and then it does its job and produces some wood shavings. But at certain points, I can go from nothign, to the plane coming to a dead stop, and when I lift it off, it has left a blade mark in the wood.
So after all that background, (and I know that this may be a vague question), is this abrupt stop / damage on the wood likely to be down to my technique, the way I have the plane set up, or even the environment I am working in?
I want to be able to try and make something, but must admit that at the moment I am a bit annoyed that I can't even master one of the basic techniques on a flat piece of wood!
I have a #5 bench plane that I have been trying to set up and use, mostly via youtube videos.
Its a New plane, and after some trial and error I managed to take it apart check the blade for sharpness (it leaves a scratch on my thumbnail without any real pressure so I assume it is) and put it back together again.
I have adjusted it so that I can plane down each side to try and get the wood shavings even. (If any of this is wrong, or pointless, then apologies. Theres a million and one you tube videos, all slightly different!)
All of that seemed ok, so I decided to just practice planing a piece of pine I had. the Pine is an old shelf, so it has already been through a planing machine, and is relatively smooth.
I am working on an old Black and Decker Work mate, with the wood clamped tight, though it is at a fairly low height.
When I plane, most of the time I get nothing (as I'd expect as its already a finished piece of wood), though now and then it does its job and produces some wood shavings. But at certain points, I can go from nothign, to the plane coming to a dead stop, and when I lift it off, it has left a blade mark in the wood.
So after all that background, (and I know that this may be a vague question), is this abrupt stop / damage on the wood likely to be down to my technique, the way I have the plane set up, or even the environment I am working in?
I want to be able to try and make something, but must admit that at the moment I am a bit annoyed that I can't even master one of the basic techniques on a flat piece of wood!